“A relentlessly fun novel, the literary equivalent of a country-punk album that grabs you and refuses to let go. Wilkes has a perfect ear for the dialect of Kentucky, and his writing is so bright, you can almost see every abandoned shack, every kudzu-covered tree. Sure, it’s bizarre, and at points almost gleefully obscene, but it’s undeniably one of the smartest, most original Southern Gothic novels to come along in years.”
—Michael Schaub, NPR
“Kentuckians Hunter S. Thompson and Johnny Depp would be cackling to beat the devil over this brazen tribute to folklore, tradition, and hillbilly rituals. What’s fascinating is how Wilkes taps into ancient archetypes to transform everyday characters into phantasmagoric figures by wrapping them in Southern euphemisms, counterintuitive contexts, and florid language more at home in a pulpit. An epic of Wagnerian proportions… Wilkes’ debut is a rich and heartfelt yarn that resonates as deeply as his music.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Wilkes’ ability to spin a story and craft language that’s as inventive and clever as the book’s plot combine to create something special that’s a bit of a contradiction itself—a book that feels both classic and new, mythic and modern.”
—PopMatters
“Chock full of vivid, hallucinatory bits, odd moments of humor, and haunted environments, with the forest itself a classic moody setting… The South comes across as sufficiently haunted: by God, by slavery, and, not least, by the ghosts, literal and figurative, of a region with a very tangled history.”
—Andrew Schenker, Electric Literature
“A page-turning delight, rife with Southern folklore. A Homeric odyssey soaked in chewing tobacco, dropped in a pocket pint of moonshine, and best consumed in one long delirious pull.”
—East Bay Review
“Wilkes takes the Southern adventure tale to a whole new level. A novel that is sure to be an instant Southern classic.”
—Deep South Magazine
“A hell of a book, and it will undoubtedly become part of the list of best, and weirdest, Southern literary gems.”
—LitReactor
“Wilkes’s sardonic humor and twisting literary explorations of Southern lore are as relentless as the kudzu entwining the story, and more fun than being attacked by revenge-bent ghosts.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A sly, rollicking Southern phantasmagoria that finds the sweet spot between tall tale and something more dangerous and psychological. Hilarious, profane, entertaining, and sneakily written. The illustrations are brilliant, too.”
—Jeff VanderMeer, author of Southern Reach trilogy