Nitro Mountain
By (Author) Lee Clay Johnson
Random House USA Inc
Vintage Books
18th May 2017
4th April 2017
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
224
Width 132mm, Height 203mm, Spine 15mm
236g
An astonishing, even shocking debut written with both humour and heart by, as John Casey puts it, "a natural-born writer who inhabits every one of his characters-the good, the bad, and those who swing back and forth." In the mine-riddled town of Bordon, Virginia, a group of lost souls are bound together by alcohol, small-time crime, and music. Leon is a lovesick bass player with a broken hand and a belief that next time-next time-he'll definitely get it right; Jennifer is the bright-but-battered waitress who can't quite escape the orbit of Arnett, the local drug dealer. When Jennifer convinces Leon to murder Arnett so she can finally be free, a dark chain of events is set in motion, its violence echoing the pain and misery that shape their fractured lives.
Forceful. Johnsons sharp prose evokes Ron Rashby way of Charles Bukowski. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Lee Johnson is a natural-born writer. He inhabits every one of his charactersthe good, the bad, and those that swing back and forth. John Casey, author of Spartina
A worthy addition to the growing canon of contemporary Appalachian noir. Nitro Mountain is like the home we failed to escape. Electric Lit
Brutal and beautiful. Youll find yourself engrossed in the hard times and bad choices of [Nitro Mountains] characters and, ultimately, the humanity we all share. Richmond Times-Dispatch
[A] darkly stunning tale of stark dramas and tragic lives. O, The Oprah Magazine
Perturbingly good. Hazardous. Addictive. Harrowing and hilarious too. Joy Williams, author of The Visiting Privilege
Dark, frightening and staggeringly good. Deep South Magazine
Johnson is a literary juggernaut. . . . Superbly well-written and tightly crafted. Marthas Vineyard Times
Cover to cover, the book exerts a fierce magnetic pull, sucking its reader into a profound desolation. Nashville Scene
Lee Clay Johnson punches through the basement window of the American Canon Library, gropes across the spines of Leon Rooke, Denis Johnson, yes, Flannery OConnor and Mr. Bill, and, heir-apparent to none and all, achieves a grasp farther than his reach. Cut-bloodied smelling of bourbon, he retrieves the book you have in your hand, some far and ancient tale best pronounced from Genesis. A masterwork of a first novel.Mark Richard, author of House of Prayer No. 2: A Writers Journey Home
Excellent . . . bold, arresting and well-timed [with] intelligent and sympathetic portraits of hard-up people making bad, justifiable decisions. BookPage
Exquisitely stark and gritty . . . Raw, yet relentlessly compelling. Publishers Weekly
Appalachian noir at its darkest and most deranged . . . An ambitious, disturbing, and daring debut. Kirkus Reviews (starred)
A suspenseful, action-packed thriller thats also a brilliant study in humanity and what pushes someone over the line. Jill McCorkle, author of Life After Life
In Nitro Mountain, Lee Clay Johnson gives us a cast of low-life bar rats trying to feel or figure out what, if anything, is precious, and how to save one another before its too late. Darcy Steinke, author of Sister Golden Hair
There is rough, real music in the voices of these characters. . . . Hilarious, harsh, original. Amy Hempel
The sort of reckless, dangerous comedy Flannery O'Connor might have written if she'd known more about drink, drugs, and country music. . . . Lee Clay Johnson is a writer with abundant and scary gifts and consummate skill; Nitro Mountain is a novel you can't put down and won't forget. David Gates, author of A Hand Reaches Down to Guide Me
Lee Clay Johnson grew up around Nashville, Tennessee, in a family of bluegrass musicians. He holds a BA from Bennington College and an MFA from the University of Virginia. His work has appeared in The Oxford American, The Common, Appalachian Heritage, Salamander, and The Mississippi Review. He lives in St. Louis and Charlottesville, Virginia.