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Preferred library: Glenwood and Souris Regional Library?

Jacob jump : a novel  Cover Image E-book E-book

Jacob jump : a novel

Morris, Eric 1959- (author.).

Summary: "Jacob Jump, the dark and meticulously crafted first novel from Eric Morris, follows a weeklong ill-fated boating trip down the Savannah River from Augusta, Georgia, to the lighthouse at Tybee Island. Chance and danger trump planning and intention at every turn, and the pull of the historic river and of fate itself propels Morris's characters with unrelenting force. Old friends Thomas Verdery and William Rhind, each seeking temporary escape from the failures of their lives, take to the river with Rhind's father. Verdery, a native southerner, has left his job and lover in Nepaug, Connecticut, while Rhind has lost his wife and child to his drinking. Encounters with dangerous weather and unhinged locals imperil the trio, who are held at gunpoint when they try to dock and soon are fighting among themselves. The hazards of the trip and a shocking loss along the way exacerbate William Rhind's drinking and tendencies toward violence. When Verdery and Rhind must become reluctant custodians to young Caron Lee, a lost girl from the backwoods family that had previously accosted them, tensions build toward explosive ends as the serene open waters of the Atlantic Ocean wait just beyond reach on the unknown, unknowable horizon. Guided by a host of influences from William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway to Cormac McCarthy, James Dickey, and Ron Rash, Morris's prose brings readers deep into the uncertainties of a still-wild southern landscape and of the frailties of the human heart yearning for past and future alike while pulled along by the inescapable current of the present. Best-selling writer and Story River Books editor at large Pat Conroy provides a foreword to the novel"--

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781611175431
  • ISBN: 1611175445
  • ISBN: 9781611175448
  • Physical Description: 1 online resource.
    remote
  • Publisher: South Carolina : University of South Carolina Press, [2015]

Content descriptions

Formatted Contents Note: Cover -- JACOB JUMP -- FOREWORD -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- CHAPTER ONE -- CHAPTER TWO -- CHAPTER THREE -- CHAPTER FOUR -- CHAPTER FIVE -- CHAPTER SIX -- CHAPTER SEVEN -- CHAPTER EIGHT -- CHAPTER NINE -- CHAPTER TEN -- CHAPTER ELEVEN -- CHAPTER TWELVE -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN -- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN -- CHAPTER NINETEEN -- CHAPTER TWENTY -- CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE -- CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO -- CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE -- CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR -- CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE -- CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX -- CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN -- CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT -- CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE -- CHAPTER THIRTY -- CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE -- CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO.
Source of Description Note:
Online resource; title from PDF title page (Ebsco, viewed June 25 2015).
Subject: Male friendship -- Fiction
Boats and boating -- Fiction
Failure (Psychology) -- Fiction
Savannah River (Ga. and S.C.) -- Fiction
Amitié masculine -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
Échec -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
Savannah (Géorgie et Car. du S. : Fleuve) -- Romans, nouvelles, etc
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General
Boats and boating
Failure (Psychology)
Male friendship
United States -- Savannah River
English
Languages & Literatures
American Literature
Genre: Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Mystery fiction.
Suspense fiction.
Psychological fiction.

  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2015 June #2
    Two Southern white guys, their lives a shambles, take a trip downriver only to find madness and death.Will Rhind and Thom Verdery are old friends in their mid-30s, natives of Augusta, Georgia. Rhind works for the local TV station; his drinking problem has caused his wife to leave, their small child in tow. Verdery, suspected of sexual harassment of a female student, has just been let go by the prep school where he taught theater, and he's broken up with his girlfriend in the process. The men have decided, as an escape perhaps, to row their longboat to Savannah. They're soon joined by Rhind's father, Dan, who's brought his own boat; he too is estranged from his wife. The booze flows freely. Ill-fated Georgians navigating a river bring to mind James Dickey's Deliverance, but Morris' first novel has little in common with that action-packed bestseller, though there are two violent encounters. The first occurs when Alice Mays, a clearly insane old woman, accuses the men of trespas sing on her humble riverfront home. Alice is cradling a shotgun; the guys are naked after swimming. The tension slackens during an interminable back and forth which is halted by a peacemaking deputy. A second encounter ends with Verdery knocking Alice unconscious as he roars "Goddam these countrified people." He's a hothead, feeling the gin, and Rhind is too drunk to row. It's no fun watching these clowns flub the simplest tasks, like making phone calls, but a theme does emerge from the confusion: coping with life is a solitary business. The setting is authentic (Morris knows his river) but the author has a long way to go before finding his voice. Copyright Kirkus 2015 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
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