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M. Randal O'Wain's debut short story collection, Hallelujah Station
and Other Stories, introduces readers to a wide and diverse cast of
characters struggling with and responding to changes and loss.
These gritty and poignant stories follow the tragic parts of life,
the pieces that may neither start nor end in comfortable resolution
and the pieces that make up complex realities. In the first story,
a former drug dealer reflects on a life-changing decision he made
years ago that ended up hurting the person he most wanted to
protect. Later in the collection, we meet a would-be robber who
turns out, in strange ways, to be the hero. O'Wain's characters are
often deeply flawed or totally lost, but in each instance, these
traits serve to reveal the characters as real, compassionate, and,
ultimately, human. Sprinkled with humor and heartache, O'Wain's
stories bring us into contact with the curious, the tragic, and the
authentic.
In Meander Belt M. Randal O'Wain offers a reflection on how a
working-class boy from Memphis, Tennessee, came to fall in love
with language, reading, writing, and the larger world outside of
the American South. This memoir examines what it means for the son
of a carpenter to value mental rather than physical labor and what
this does to his relationship with his family, whose livelihood and
sensibility are decidedly blue collar. Straining the father-son
bond further, O'Wain leaves home to find a life outside Memphis,
roaming from place to place, finding odd jobs, and touring with his
band. From memory and observation, O'Wain assembles a subtle and
spare portrait of his roots, family, and ultimately discovers that
his working-class upbringing is not so antithetical to the man he
has become.
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