Earl Tubb is an angry old man with a very big stick. Euless Boss is
a high school football coach with no more room in his office for
trophies and no more room underneath the bleachers for burying
bodies. And they're just two of the folks you'll meet in Castor
County, Alabama, home of Boss BBQ, the state champion Runnin' Rebs
and more bastards than you've ever seen! "What does old Earl Tubb
do when he returns home to Craw County, Ala., only to find the
place a veritable criminal fiefdom run by Euless Boss, the local
high school football coach? Why, pick up the stick helpfully
cleaved by lightning from a tree growing out of his daddy's grave
and start meting out justice just like his father, the old sheriff,
did. In the cleaning-up-the-dirty-old-town Southern-fried pulper,
writer Aaron (Scalped) and artist Jason Latour (Django Unchained)
spread around no more story than is absolutely necessary, and most
of it involves people being at the wrong end of a stick, baseball
bat, or even (in an early fight scene) a deep-fryer basket. Both
Jasons hail from the South, as they discuss in a particularly
bighearted introduction, and so likely feel unencumbered by
concerns about overdosing on cliches. Thus, the high-impact pages
are strewn with bruising high school football, sweet tea, barbecue,
trucker caps, and snarling rednecks. The story, in which Tubb
clobbers his way through throngs of underlings to get at Boss, is
no more complicated than a redo of Walking Tall. But there's a
thread of something deeper, bloodier, and more resonant that often
transcends the usual psychotic-redneck shtick, aided in no small
part by Latour's spare, elegant art." - Publishers Weekly
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