Traveling the same route the song chronicles, from Tennessee into Arkansas, through Texas and into Mexico, Averill visited racetracks, Spanish missions, historical museums, a living history farm, and national parks, inventing characters of his own along the way. His novel captures the spirit of the ballad while telling the story of Robert Johnson, a man who holds love in his heart though adventure rules his time. Pursued by a bounty hunter, Indians, and his conscience, Johnson and his horse are tested, strengthened, and made resolute.
тАЬBoth an odyssey and a great love story, rode is made compelling by its thoughtful hero and the surprising woman he longs for. Precise language and authentic detail render a vivid sense of another time, and AverillтАЩs Southern landscape, so beautifully drawn, is peopled with unforgettable men and women.тАЭ тАФLaura Moriarty, author of The Center of Everything.
тАЬNo one drives a narrative better than Thomas Fox Averill, and this novel version of a grand American tale shows Tom AverillтАЩs skills at their best. rode performs not only through action but the perfect articulation of 19th Century Arkansas and Tennessee. Averill knows the lingo, blunt, uncompromising, and accurate, from saddle trees to foals, and even to a dauncy mare, a wonderful allusion to the authorтАЩs Scottish heritage and ours. This is complicated evocation of character, yes, in Robert Johnson, Jo Benson, and others; but even more, Thomas AverillтАЩs narrative rides evocative language like a great stud horse.тАЭтАФRobert Stewart, author of Outside Language: Essays, editor, New Letters magazine
Thomas Fox Averill, a graduate of the University of Iowa WritersтАЩ Workshop, is professor of English and writer- in-residence at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas.