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Slab

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

On a slab that's all Katrina left of her Mississippi home, Tiger tells her story, and it is as American as Horatio Alger, Schwab's Pharmacy, and a tent revival. She was a stripper, but is she now a performance artist and best-selling author, and it is really Barbara Walters she's narrating this tale to? We're too dazzled to know more than that this is about how a girl ends up in the backwash of decadence and sin and how out of the flotsam and jetsam she might construct a story of herself and the South to carry her to salvation.

Serial killers, preachers, and prison flower-arranging classes. Bikers, bad boyfriends, and a stripper who performed as a Trans Am. Tiger has seen it all and as she sits on her slab, identifying anecdotes as they go by, we witness Selah Saterstrom at her greatest—funny, bawdy, and steeped in the landscape and all the devastation it has created and absorbed.

Selah Saterstrom is the author of the novels The Pink Institution, The Meat and Spirit Plan, and Slab, all published by Coffee House Press. She is also the author of Tiger Goes to the Dogs, a limited edition letterpress project published by Nor By Press. Her prose, poetry, and interviews can be found in publications such as The Black Warrior Review, Postroad, Tarpaulin Sky, Fourteen Hills, and other places. She is the director of the PhD program in creative writing at the University of Denver and teaches and lectures throughout the United States.

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    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2015

      Since Tiger is an exotic dancer-turned-performance artist, it's not surprising that this chronicle of her shifting fortunes in the darkly decadent South is presented in two acts, with Act I: Tiger offering scenes like "Tiger Goes to the Dogs" and Act II: Preacher featuring frequent biblical incantation, though the title character was simply named Preacher by a mother wanting something better for her son. Tiger's Act I meditations would be called rambling if they weren't so absorbingly, concisely written; they end with Tiger sitting on the slab that's all Katrina left of her Mississippi home. In Act II, as Preacher suffers an accident, a fortune teller brings Tiger a vision of the coming ruin. VERDICT Not for fans of continuous narrative but weirdly wonderful.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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