Ebook {Epub PDF} The Gone Dead by Chanelle Benz






















Amazon. In The Gone Dead, Chanelle Benz’s haunting debut novel, Billie James returns to Glendale, Mississippi, to the house where her father died some thirty years earlier. She has now inherited the small shack and has returned to fix it up for incoming renters. Instead, she discovers a mystery at the heart of her father’s death, and we follow Billie as she unravels that mystery, trying to understand what .  · Author Q A with Chanelle Benz. By Guest Author. On J. In Southern Fiction. Interview by Jana Hoops. Special to the Clarion-Ledger Sunday print edition (June 23) Born in London and growing up in points around the U.S., Chanelle Benz wound up discovering the Mississippi Delta–which would become the setting for her new novel The Gone Dead –when her husband’s . 7 rows ·  · [The Gone Dead] feels as old and rich as the delta soil on which it happens. Tom Franklin. Wise Brand: HarperCollins Publishers.


THE GONE DEAD By Chanelle Benz. De'Shawn Charles Winslow's "In West Mills" and Chanelle Benz's "The Gone Dead" both ponder secrets: what drives some people to guard them with their. The Gone Dead Audiobook. Hearts. Chanelle Benz is a new-to-me author, but when I saw that Bahni Turpin was the narrator, I decided to look further into the story. I liked the sound of the book blurb, so I decided to give this book a go. I'm really glad that I did. Chanelle Benz. The Gone Dead spreads out like the Mississippi River's many tributaries, showing how one person's life affects others, even long after death. A father dies mysteriously, and his daughter, too young to remember what she saw—if she saw anything—is whisked away. It takes another death to bring Billie James back to Greendale.


[The Gone Dead] feels as old and rich as the delta soil on which it happens. Tom Franklin. Wise. “In West Mills,” by De’Shawn Charles Winslow, and “The Gone Dead,” by Chanelle Benz, serve up timeless Southern stories. Chanelle Benz. J. The Gone Dead by Chanelle Benz is an electrifying first novel from “a riveting new voice in American fiction” (George Saunders): A young woman returns to her childhood home in the American South and uncovers secrets about her father’s life and death. This house was once a house. Heard the knock of white men looking for a boy hiding at his uncle’s house, heard shots in the night, far off but always too close, and heard weeping, too much weeping too damn.

0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000