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Publisher's Weekly: A first novel packed with this much mesmerizing
craziness is a rarity. A tale spanning four generations of the
Dufore family of rural Esperance, Vt., Wilber's novel seems to have
caromed off such influences as Twain, Vonnegut, Faulkner and even
John Irving. Uncle Ab is doomed to burst into flames. Poor Davy is
literally going soft and rotting like a piece of spoiled fruit.
Bobby lives in dread of being hit by a meteor. Old Gran Marie
hasn't slept in 70 years. Paul and his little son may have turned
into trout. These idiosyncrasies form only a part of the patchwork
heritage of the Dufore clan, and women who chose to marry a Dufore
will have their hands full. Hilarity and horror overflow these
pages in equal measure, sending out an intensely exuberant message
that life goes on. This rich stew of a debut haunts and compels.
Christian fundamentalism in America emerged a century ago, the
faith of generations of immigrants who had experienced war and
revolution, removal and upheaval. The Scots-Irish who had settled
the South inherited both an evangelical legacy of abolitionism and
social reform on the one hand, and complicity in human slavery and
racial oppression on the other. This book brings the story of
fundamentalism to life through the generations of the Rice
family--immigrants, soldiers, farmers, slaveowners, refugees, and
preachers. This is a work of history, memoir, and personal
testimony about the changing shape of a faith that seeks to
transform the world. Foreword by Parker J. Palmer
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