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As he cleans out his dead father's workshop, Jess Kirkman of North Carolina discovers a treasure map with the names of women. He goes to see them and obtains new insights into his father's character. Fourth installment in a family saga by the author of Farewell, I'm Bound to Leave You.Tags
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What an interesting character Jess’s father is. Whimsical. A master storyteller. A mad inventor. It made me envious. The thing with the pie was great – right in the face of the hydro engineer who stupidly opened the dam and flooded the river and ruined the bridge and the garden that Jess’s dad built for his mother.
The only weird part was the trip in the space ship. I couldn’t figure out if it was something that he made his family participate in or some kind of metaphorical fairy tale. The rest of it was interesting. All the people that Jess met had known and loved his dad. They all wanted to give space to bury the two parents side by side (after their over subscribed cemetery screwed things up and buried someone else next to show more Jess’s dad). It was set in the rural Appalachian mountains but no one seemed like a hick or overly countrified. Nice. The man who wrote this obviously cares about where he came from. He has a love for his characters and treats them with great gentleness and dignity.
The musicians reminded me of the ones in O Brother Where Art Thou (It’s the Soggy Bottom Boys!). The end was a bit odd though. They go and try to dig him up in the middle of the night and all they find are some fox’s bones. Where Jess’s dad really is, is never known. Kind of a weird ending for a very down-to-earth book. show less
The only weird part was the trip in the space ship. I couldn’t figure out if it was something that he made his family participate in or some kind of metaphorical fairy tale. The rest of it was interesting. All the people that Jess met had known and loved his dad. They all wanted to give space to bury the two parents side by side (after their over subscribed cemetery screwed things up and buried someone else next to show more Jess’s dad). It was set in the rural Appalachian mountains but no one seemed like a hick or overly countrified. Nice. The man who wrote this obviously cares about where he came from. He has a love for his characters and treats them with great gentleness and dignity.
The musicians reminded me of the ones in O Brother Where Art Thou (It’s the Soggy Bottom Boys!). The end was a bit odd though. They go and try to dig him up in the middle of the night and all they find are some fox’s bones. Where Jess’s dad really is, is never known. Kind of a weird ending for a very down-to-earth book. show less
I liked the first two-thirds of this book, when it revolved around a son's attempt to find out more about his deceased father's inner thoughts. Abruptly it changed into a sci-fi book with a flashback (I think) to when the family went on a trip to the moon via the father's homemade spaceship. This incident wasn't mentioned again, and could easily be lifted out of the book without causing any plot disruptions.
Overall I think the book was mediocre, and putting in a random chapter that was pure sci-fi did nothing to make things better.
Overall I think the book was mediocre, and putting in a random chapter that was pure sci-fi did nothing to make things better.
A good read, but it was obviously part of the trilogy. I read the first two 14-15 years ago and forget a lot of them. I'll have to return to them to remind myself.
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Southern Fiction
212 works; 52 members
Author Information

58+ Works 1,668 Members
Born in Canton, North Carolina, Fred Chappell earned a Master's degree at Duke University. He has written numerous novels and books of poetry, including First and Last Words, Midquest, More Shapes than One, and I Am One of You Forever. Among the awards Chappell has received in his illustrious career are the Sir Walter Raleigh Prize in 1973, the show more North Carolina Award for Literature in 1980, Yale University Library's Bollingen Prize in poetry in 1985, and the Aiken Taylor Award in poetry in 1996. Chappell is Burlington Industries Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He also writes about poetry every month as a News & Observer book columnist. He was selected by the governor of North Carolina to be the state's poet laureate in 1997, a position he held until 2002. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1999
- People/Characters
- Jess Kirkman
- Important places
- Greensboro, North Carolina, USA; North Carolina, USA
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Statistics
- Members
- 127
- Popularity
- 254,283
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.67)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 1

























































