The Marrowbone Marble Company
By (Author) M. Glenn Taylor
HarperCollins Publishers
The Borough Press
11th May 2012
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
432
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
300g
A powerful novel of love and war, righteousness and redemption, and the triumph of the human spirit.
From the author of the critically-acclaimed The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart comes this sweeping novel of love and war, power and oppression, faith and deception, over the course of three defining American decades.
At the end of the Pacific War, where he has witnessed terrible things, Loyal Ledford is a lost man, disconnected from the present yet divorced from his dissolute, violent past. His life is set on a new course when he meets his cousins, Dimple and Wimpy, the Bonecutter brothers. Their land, mysterious, elemental Marrowbone Cut, calls to him and it is there, with help from an unlikely bunch, that the Marrowbone Marble Company is slowly forged. Over the next two decades, the factory grounds become a vanguard of the civil rights movement and the war on poverty, a home for those intent on change. Inevitably, such a home invites trouble, and Ledford must fight for his family.
Told in clear and powerful prose in the tradition of Cormac McCarthy and John Irving, The Marrowbone Marble Company recounts the transformative journey of a man and his community, taking a harrowing look at the issues of race and class throughout the tumultuous 1950s and '60s.
Taylor really is in that long American tradition that starts with Mark Twain and finds its character, meaning and moral force in the extraordinariness of ordinary people. TIME OUT
a mesmerizing storytellerTaylor has created a remarkably complex, soulful, and provocative historical novel righteous in its perspective on Americas struggle to live up to its core beliefs. BOOKLIST
He writes with the elemental force of a latterday John Steinbeck." CANBERRA TIMES
This novel confirms the view that he is a major and original talent. SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
Splendidly Norman Rockwell-ishIts like watching an idealistic old movie made in pre-McCarthy Hollywood. THE TIMES
Marrowbone throbs with muscular Hemingway sentences, consciously biblical cadences, a plethora of imagery where almost every mundane event holds a major and marvellous message. WEEKEND HERALD
Glenn Taylor was born and raised in Huntington, West Virginia. His first novel, The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart, was a finalist for the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award. The Marrowbone Marble Company is his second novel. Taylor lives in Morgantown, West Virginia with his wife and three sons. He teaches in the English Department at West Virginia University.