Donna Everhart Book Talk + Signing

Details
Wed, Mar 2, 2022
4:00 pm
2022-03-02T16:00:00-05:00
2022-03-02T16:15:00-05:00
This event has already occurred.
Fiction Addiction
1175 Woods Crossing Rd #2, Greenville, SC 29607, USA
16.91
Contact
Fiction Addiction
(864) 675-0540
Information

Donna Everhart Book Talk and Signing

Join Donna Everhart for an in-person book talk and signing at Fiction Addiction on Wednesday, March 2nd, at 4pm to celebrate the launch of her new book, The Saints of Swallow Hill.

Tickets to the event are $16.91, and include a copy of The Saints of Swallow Hill. Capacity is limited, so purchase your tickets today! Additional books can be ordered on our website or purchased at the event while supplies last. The author will be available to mingle and sign books at the event.

If you do not feel comfortable attending in-person, signed copies of The Saints of Swallow Hill can be purchased on our website.

Tickets can be purchased online through Wednesday, March 2nd, at 2pm. Refunds can be requested up until the ticket cutoff. At-the-door tickets will be available as space allows.


		Donna Everhart Book Talk & Signing image

Few writers evoke the complexities of the heart and the gritty fascination of the American South as vividly and authentically as Donna Everhart. Her first four novels, The Education of Dixie DupreeThe Road to BittersweetThe Forgiving Kind, and The Moonshiner’s Daughter, firmly established her as a powerful voice in Southern fiction, receiving much acclaim including an IndieNext List selection, a SIBA Okra Pick, a Southeastern Library Association Award, and two Publishers Marketplace Buzz Books selections. Now Where the Crawdads Sing meets The Four Winds as the award-winning author immerses readers in a unique setting – a turpentine camp buried deep in the vast pine forests of Georgia during the Great Depression—for a captivating story of friendship, survival, and three vagabonds’ intersecting lives…

During the Great Depression, wretched labor camps crop up in remote areas of the expansive pine forests throughout the American South. Destitute workers live and toil under terrible conditions to harvest pine gum, hacking into tree trunks, drawing out the sticky sap that gives the Tar Heel State its nickname, and hauling it to stills to be refined into turpentine. Trapped in these isolated locations, workers are entirely dependent on the often greedy, abusive camp owners who provide food and housing at grossly inflated prices. Subsistence living means racking huge debts they are forced to work off, creating an endless cycle of labor and debt. But for the most desperate among America’s vast unemployed, these camps are often the last and only option.

This much is true for three individuals whose lives intersect in the deep woods of Georgia at the Swallow Hill turpentine camp in 1932. For Rae Lynn Cobb, a young woman disguised as a man, Swallow Hill offers distance and anonymity from those who would wrongly imprison her for killing her kind though careless husband. For a charming bachelor named Del Reese, it’s a place where backbreaking work might drown out memories of a recent trauma that’s shaken him to his core.

But Swallow Hill is no easy haven. The squalid camp is ruled by a sadistic boss named Crow and the greedy commissary owner Otis Riddle, a man who takes out his frustrations on his browbeaten wife, Cornelia. Del and “Ray Cobb” are physically and emotionally tested as they struggle to survive harsh, brutal conditions under the ever watchful, narrow-minded Crow. As Rae Lynn forges a deeper friendship with both Del and Cornelia, she begins to envision a path out of the camp. But she will have to come to terms with her past, with all its pain and beauty, before she can open herself to a new life and seize the chance to begin again…

 

About the Author:

Donna Everhart is the USA Today bestselling author of Southern fiction with authenticity and grit, including the Indie Next List selection The Education of Dixie DupreeThe Forgiving KindThe Moonshiner’s Daughter, and the Southeastern Library Association Award-winning novel The Road to Bittersweet. Born and raised in Raleigh, she has stayed close to her hometown for much of her life and now lives just an hour away in Dunn, North Carolina.