Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter: A Novel
Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter: A Novel book cover

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter: A Novel

Hardcover – Bargain Price, October 1, 2010

Price
$11.70
Format
Hardcover
Pages
288
Publisher
William Morrow
Publication Date
Dimensions
6 x 0.97 x 9 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

Product Description Edgar Award-winning author Tom Franklin returns with his most accomplished and resonant novel so far—an atmospheric drama set in rural Mississippi. In the late 1970s, Larry Ott and Silas "32" Jones were boyhood pals. Their worlds were as different as night and day: Larry, the child of lower-middle-class white parents, and Silas, the son of a poor, single black mother. Yet for a few months the boys stepped outside of their circumstances and shared a special bond. But then tragedy struck: Larry took a girl on a date to a drive-in movie, and she was never heard from again. She was never found and Larry never confessed, but all eyes rested on him as the culprit. The incident shook the county—and perhaps Silas most of all. His friendship with Larry was broken, and then Silas left town. More than twenty years have passed. Larry, a mechanic, lives a solitary existence, never able to rise above the whispers of suspicion. Silas has returned as a constable. He and Larry have no reason to cross paths until another girl disappears and Larry is blamed again. And now the two men who once called each other friend are forced to confront the past they've buried and ignored for decades. A Q&A with Author Tom Franklin Q: Tell us a bit about your latest book Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter . How did you come up with the title? Franklin: Title's a pneumonic device used to teach children (mostly southern children) how to spell Mississippi. M, I, crooked-letter, crooked-letter, I, crooked-letter, crooked-letter, I, humpback, humback, I. Q: Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter is a bit of a departure from your previous two novels— Smonk and Hell at the Breech —in that it is set in contemporary times and the story line is a bit less dark. What inspired the premise for this novel and the departure from a more historical setting? Franklin: I'd been wanting to write about a small town police officer, and I'd long had the image of a loner mechanic in my mind. When I put the two together, the story began to form. I used a lot of autobiographical stuff for Larry, the mechanic. Q: A review in USA Today (for Hell at the Breech ) stated that, “he also makes his characters rise up from the pages as if they were there with you.” …and this is certainly true in your latest novel. How do you approach the task of developing your characters and bringing them to life? Are the characters in Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter based on anyone in particular? Franklin: They're both a combination of different facets of different people, a conglomeration of fact and fiction. I usually try to just let them begin to do what they want to do, just put them in a situation and see what they do. When they begin to surprise me, do things I hadn't anticipated, that's when it's working. But the character of Silas "32" Jones is very loosely based on the sole police officer of the hamlet of Dickinson, Alabama, where I grew up. This guy was actually the law in a nearby mill town, and my hamlet of Dickinson fell in his tiny jurisdiction. I've always loved the idea of small town cops, especially one who might be a kind of underdog to the police forces of nearby larger towns. Q: In Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter your two main characters are anything but stereotypical—the young black boy goes off to college to play baseball and comes back to be the town constable and the young white boy is the accused murderer and the town outcast. What, if anything, prompted you to portray these characters this way? Franklin: No real person is a stereotype, and I try to make my characters as real as I can. We're all a mess of contradictions and secrets, strangenesses and desires, and nobody's all good or all bad. We're all somewhere in the spectrum between absolute good and absolute evil. So I just try to find a character who's fairly normal, and put him or her in a fix and see how he or she negotiates it to see, as Kurt Vonnegut says, what he or she is made of. In this case, the story as I came to understand it called for Larry to stay home and Silas to leave. If it had been the other way around, I'd still work to make the characters unstereotypical. Q: Without giving away too much of the story, what is one thing (emotion, thought) that readers can expect to walk away with after reading this book? Franklin: It's a sad book, but it's full of hope. Hope is what I want a reader to leave with. Q: Historically the South has not always had a positive image in other parts of the country. How has your experience growing up and living in the rural South shaped your talent as a writer? And have you ever felt the need to justify or redeem the South’s past in any of your works? Franklin: I think growing up in the south made me the person I am, and the writer I am comes from that. So, yes, the south's made me the writer I am. It taught me to listen to the cadences and rhythms of speech, and to notice the landscape. It also has this defeated feel, a lingering of old sin, that makes it sweet in a rotting kind of way. Much of it is poor, much is rural, and that's an interesting combination, a deep well for stories. Q: Did you always know that you wanted to be a writer? Who are some writers, past and present, that you admire or have inspired you? Franklin: I always knew I wanted to tell stories, one way or another. If I'd had a video camera in the mid 1970s I'm sure I'd be a filmmaker now. But I just had a portable typewriter, and so the stories I could tell were ones on paper. Q: You are one of the most celebrated writers in the field, and have been compared to the likes of Harper Lee , William Faulkner , and Elmore Leonard . What do you believe is the one thing that sets you apart from other contemporary writers in your genre? Franklin: What sets me apart? I honestly don't know that I’m more "apart" from other writers of my generation. Landscape plays a large role in what I write, but that's true of many other writers. My stuff is set in the south, but that's true of others as well. I don't know, honestly. Q: As a professor of English, what is one piece of advice that you would share with aspiring writers? Franklin: Read, starting with the classics. Read all the time. If you don't read, you won't ever be a writer. Also, write. This seems obvious, but it's amazing how many "writers" don't write very much. From Publishers Weekly Franklin's third novel (after Smonk) is a meandering tale of an unlikely friendship marred by crime and racial strain in smalltown Mississippi. Silas Jones and Larry Ott have known each other since their late 1970s childhood when Silas lived with his mother in a cabin on land owned by Larry's father. At school they could barely acknowledge one another, Silas being black and Larry white, but they secretly formed a bond hunting, fishing, and just being boys in the woods. When a girl goes missing after going on a date with Larry, he is permanently marked as dangerous despite the lack of evidence linking him to her disappearance, and the two boys go their separate ways. Twenty-five years later, Silas is the local constable, and when another girl disappears, Larry, an auto mechanic with few customers and fewer friends, is once again a person of interest. The Southern atmosphere is rich, but while this novel has the makings of an engaging crime drama, the languid shifting from present to past, the tedious tangential yarns, and the heavy-handed reveal at the end generate far more fizz than pop. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist *Starred Review* Rural Mississippi in the 1970s was rife with racial tension, but skin color didn’t matter to boyhood companions Silas Jones and Larry Ott. Silas, the son of a poor, single black mother, and Larry, the child of white lower-middle-class parents, were both outsiders, Silas because of his color, Larry because he was quiet and a little odd, his nose always buried in horror novels. The young men’s bond strengthened over time, until the night a pretty local girl went on a date with Larry to the drive-in movies and was never heard from again. No body was found and Larry never confessed, but that didn’t keep the townspeople from suspecting him. Estranged from his friend, Silas heads off to college in Oxford, Mississippi, and more than 20 years later, returns to take a job as town constable. He sees no reason to contact Larry, who’s settled into a lonely existence as a mechanic, unable to escape the relentless whispers and dirty looks. The disappearance of another girl brings the two former friends back together, forcing them to come to terms with buried secrets and dark truths. Edgar Award winner Franklin (Hell at the Breech, 2003) renders luminous prose and a cast of compelling characters in this moody, masterful entry. --Allison Block Read more

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Too much to swallow

What is a crooked letter? An "S" apparently, based on a statement in the front of the book about how "southern children are taught to spell Mississippi." Is the statement true in some areas (such as Chabot, Mississippi, population give or take 500) or a figment of the author's fertile imagination?

Similar questions might be asked about the plot of this book, which involves a black police officer and paranoid white recluse who were once friends and are tied together by a teenage girl's murder that both have reason to remember. Never mind the plot spoiler details, but the storyline toggles back and forth between current criminal activity in the area and the events of 20+ years earlier.

Great local color (Franklin lives in Oxford, Miss.), nicely written, but in my view the book falls short in the plausibility department.
3 people found this helpful
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Wonderful characters!

Larry Ott and Silas "32" Jones were able to form a brief friendship growing up in small-town Mississippi in the 70s even though Larry was white and Silas was black. One day Larry took a girl to the drive-in and she was never seen again. Although Larry was never charged with a crime, the county shunned him after that and Silas left town. Now twenty years later, Silas has returned as a constable and Larry continues to live as a hermit. When another girl disappears, they are forced to reconnect and confront their past.

This book is a crime drama but it's more than that too. It's about Larry and Silas and the relationship between the two men. Larry and Silas are both well-developed characters when it would have been easy to make them stereotypes. I felt like I got to know them both really well and sympathized with both of them. The whodunit part of the plot wasn't that hard to figure out but I don't think that was the point of the book. This is a wonderful, character driven story to be immersed in.
2 people found this helpful
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Fantastic read

This book has all the elements I look for in a great read, well-developed plot, believable multi-faceted characters, and superb prose. Franklin has written a wonderful book addressing serious issues without beating us over the head with a "morality play". Larry Ott, the main character faces a life of unproven guilt in the murder of a local girl. Ostracized and alone he again becomes a suspect in a subsequent murder dredging up old demons and betrayals. Silas Jones, the local constable finds himself facing his secret childhood friend as a suspect. Franklin takes this scenario and runs with it, taking us through both the past and present to a great ending which resonates with sincerity. I'm on to my next Franklin book ASAP.
2 people found this helpful
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Great, great book

This is a really great book. Very vivid, warm and believable characters. It starts out little slow, but after the first half it picks up to heart-pounding novel that kept me awake until 4am for couple of nights. I just had to finish it. Great storytelling and character build up.
2 people found this helpful
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Deserves More Than 5 Stars

This book, I literally, could not put down! I read till 1:30 in the morning one night and then HAD to finish it the next night. This story is up there on my "A-List" of books. I loved it. There is nothing more satisfying than a good story. If someone hasn't bought the movie rights to this story, they should. ASAP.
2 people found this helpful
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Extraordinary Picture of His Chosen Time and Place

"Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter," an Edgar Award Nominee for best novel, is the latest crime novel from Tom Franklin, already an Edgar Award winner, author of the highly-thought of [[ASIN:0060566760 Hell at the Breech: A Novel]], [[ASIN:B002BWQ5YK Smonk: A Novel]]and [[ASIN:0688177719 Poachers: Stories]]. It is set in the author's native American South, in a small town in deepest Mississippi, not that far, I imagine, from Oxford, MI, where Franklin teaches at the University of Mississippi. It offers lots of Southern Gothic, not to mention southern-fried menace, to its readers. And, oh, yes, southern children are, according to the author, taught to spell Mississippi as, "M, I, crooked letter, crooked letter, I, crooked letter, crooked letter, I, humpback, humpback, I."

In the 1970s, Amos, MI is a quiet rural town, with Silas "32" Jones, son of a poor, black, single mother, as its lone law enforcement officer. As a rule, not much happened here. But twenty years or so ago, during Jones' high school years-- he shone at baseball,"32" was his number--the teenage Cyndy Walker disappeared after a date to the local drive-in movie with the widely disliked and despised Larry Ott, child of the white working class. At the time, Silas and Larry were friends, in secret, as even interracial friendship was not tolerated at the time. Cyndy's body has never been found, nor has any evidence to prove that Larry killed her: nevertheless, the entire town has assumed Larry's guilt, and has shunned him.

Larry, who inherited his father's garage, has spent many years suffering in lonely solitude, become reclusive. Then, suddenly, someone tries to kill the mechanic, another lovely young woman goes missing, and the town's drug dealer is murdered. Silas has avoided Larry for all that time, but now, as a constable, he must renew his relationship with Larry, to try to solve Amos's crime wave, and the two men must try to overcome the obstacles they have kept secret that stand between them.

Franklin is a fine writer, and gives us an atmospheric, resonant small southern town at some critical moments in its history. His narrative and descriptive writing are excellent, his plotting complex, well able to hold my attention, and his characters so sharply drawn that I couldn't help but sympathize with Larry's unhappy plight. Many reviewers have already lauded this book, but please allow me to be another. The author draws an extraordinary picture of his chosen time and place, while giving us an involving mystery, all in exquisite, poetic language.
1 people found this helpful
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Review of 'Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter'

This book was an enjoyable and easy read. There were several mysteries wrapped up in one and it kept the reader guessing.
1 people found this helpful
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Slow start, but builds to a satisfying read

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good atmospheric whodunit. Initially I had a hard time getting into the characters but the author successfully builds his story into a captivating page-turner. Don't miss this one!
1 people found this helpful
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Great "Read" (Audio Book)

The narrator, Kevin Kenerly (also an actor at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, OR), made this well-written book come alive with his rich, strong voice. He took on both main characters with absolute certainty. The development of the two main characters and the mystery behind their lives was compelling. Couldn't stop listening, and assume it would be the same with the book.
1 people found this helpful
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Moving and Evocative

Beautifully written story that is part mystery and part thriller with beautifully drawn characters. Very evocative rendering of what it's like in small-town Mississippi (where I have spent a little bit of time) with its small businesses, Wal-Marts, dilapidated buildings, and hidden family and local histories that get entwined and twisted like kudzu.

This story is ostensibly about two childhood friends--one who is considered to be weird and eccentric, who shrinks under the weight of a cruel and insensitive father and then is forced to retreat completely when he becomes the prime suspect in the disappearance of his date; the other who becomes a popular local and college baseball player who abandons the friendship with the weird boy when it would affect his own standing with the rest of his high school crowd and for other reasons that become clear as the story unfolds.

This is an extremely moving and affecting narrative about what parents can do to children and children to each other as they grow. It is about how the sins of the past can live on and ultimately, bit by bit, with courage and intention and hopefulness, be made right.
1 people found this helpful