Lookaway, Lookaway, Wilton Barnhardt
List: $32.99 | Sale: $23.10
Club: $16.49

Lookaway, Lookaway

Narrator: Scott Shepherd

Unabridged: 16 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/20/2013


Synopsis

"Move over, Tom Wolfe! Writing with brilliance and brio, Barnhardt has penned a hilarious satire which often has surprising depth and hits way too close to the truth." —Lee SmithJerene Jarvis Johnston and her husband Duke are exemplars of Charlotte, North Carolina's high society, a world where old Southern money and the secrets behind it meet the new wealth of bankers, real estate speculators, and carpetbagging social climbers. Steely and implacable, Jerene presides over her family's legacy of paintings at the Mint Museum; Duke, the one-time college golden boy and descendant of a Confederate general, whose promising political career was mysteriously short-circuited, has settled into a comfortable semi-senescence as a Civil War re-enactor. Jerene's brother Gaston is an infamously dissolute bestselling historical novelist who has never managed to begin his long-dreamed-of masterpiece, and their sister Dillard's unfortunate life decisions and losses have rendered her a near-recluse.As the four Johnston children—smart but reckless Annie, good-boy minister Bo, might be gay but that's okay Joshua, and damaged, dangerous Jerilyn—flounder in their adult lives, Jerene must take action to preserve the family's legacy, Duke's fragile honor, and what's left of the dwindling family fortune. She will stop at nothing to keep what she has—is it too much to ask for one ounce of cooperation from her heedless family? In Lookaway, Lookaway, Wilton Barnhardt has written a full-bore, headlong, hilarious narrative of a family coming apart, a society changing beyond recognition, and an unforgettable woman striving to pull it all together.Includes a bonus interview between Wilton Barnhardt and George Witte, editor-in-chief of St. Martin's Press. A Kirkus Reviews Best Fiction Book of 2013

Reviews

AudiobooksNow review by Carla on 2013-11-01 04:25:14

I was prepared for this to be one of those Southern cuteasabutton novels filled with stereotypes and recipes. I was very pleasantly surprised! Ive downloaded a lot of books that were supposed to keep the listener up all night and laughing past the point of physical comfort. Most were neither. This one is.More Confederacy of Dunces than Fried Green Tomatos. Hilariously crude at times but only to better serve the characterizations. An unexpected jewel.