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South Toward Home

Adventures and Misadventures in My Native Land

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

This program is read by the author.
South Toward Home is a wry and humorous audiobook about life and culture in the American South.

In thinking about her native land, Julia Reed quotes another Southern writer, Willie Morris, who said, "It's the juxtapositions that get you down here." These juxtapositions are, for Julia, the soul of the South and in her warmhearted and funny new audiobook, South Toward Home, she chronicles her adventures through the highs and the lows of Southern life—the Delta hot tamale festival, a masked ball, a rollicking party in a boat on a sand bar, scary Christian billboards, and the southern affection for the lowly possum. She writes about the southern penchant for making their own fun in every venue from a high-toned New Orleans dinner party to cocktail crawls on the streets of the French Quarter where to-go cups are de rigueur.
And with as much hilarity as possible, Julia shines her light on the South's more embarrassing tendencies like dry counties and the politics of lust. As she puts it, "My fellow Southerners have brought me the greatest joy—on the page, over the airwaves, around the dinner table, at the bar or, hell, in the checkout line." South Towards Home, with a foreword by Jon Meacham, is Julia Reed's valentine to the place she loves best.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2018
      Reed’s collection of snappy columns from the Southern lifestyle magazine Garden & Gun makes for an inviting way to ease into summer reading, even for those who have never ventured below the Mason-Dixon line. She describes growing up in a rarified South, one that included impressive guests at family parties—William F. Buckley, for one—and debutante balls, but her writing transcends socioeconomic boundaries as easily as geographic ones. A top-notch storyteller, Reed relates early memories ranging from a case of adolescent heartbreak that resulted in her triumphant discovery of “the healing power of glamour,” to the complete neglect of her beloved first car. A Southern book would be incomplete without a discussion of food, and Reed does not disappoint, with nods to fried chicken, Kool-Aid pickles (aka the Koolickle), various pig parts, and the Delta tamale. Most memorable, perhaps, are Reed’s stories about entertaining, from “insanely over the top” boat rides on the Mississippi
      to a raucous Thanksgiving celebration pairing turkey with mint juleps. Reed is hilarious and charmingly irreverent, and her ability to capture an element of Southern life in a phrase (“God, Gators and Gumbo” for Louisiana) or to describe, in a short sentence or two, a funny, sweet memory of 40 years ago, are the marks of a true talent.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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