Public hangings, outlaws, and brothels figure into Taylor’s lyrical, funny story.—Entertainment Weekly, Top Pick in Paperback
Much of [A Hanging at Cinder Bottom] is devoted to one long con, and this has its pleasures–a sort of Appalachian ‘Ocean’s Eleven’–but…what makes [Cinder Bottom] a bone-through, can’t-quit-you craving is Taylor’s preternatural gift for language.
—New York Times Book Review
As complex (and frail) as . . . an Elmore Leonard novel. . . This ingeniously structured novel is a lot of fun — if you like card tricks and whiskey and the story of people with nothing who are trying to pull off a big one.—Los Angeles Times
Taylor has a gift for language . . . Like Portis’s True Grit, [A Hanging at Cinder Bottom is] an American fable told with literary nuance.
—Kirkus
Taylor has written a sprawling, lively, serio-comic mountaineer novel set in his native West Virginia. […] The backwoods humor is somewhat reminiscent of Daniel Woodrell, which includes flatulence jokes and over-the-top bedlam as Taylor closes out his rollicking yarn with poetic justice.
—Publishers Weekly
Glenn Taylor’s new novel defies classification or clichés. It’s like being dropped into a world, and having that world continue around you in its maelstrom and hilarity while you are stunned. It will clean your clock, fix your wagon, and knock you out.
—Susan Straight, author of Between Heaven and Here
It’s not enough to say Glenn Taylor is a brilliant writer. He’s that rarity nowadays, a great storyteller. ‘It was the day on which a game of stud poker commenced in Keystone that would last thirteen years.’ I’m not lying when I say the rest of A Hanging at Cinder Bottom is just as irresistible. You’ll never have a better time at a hanging.
—Stewart O’Nan, author of A Prayer for the Dying
Once again, Taylor takes us to a place and time that could easily be overlooked and forgotten, transforming the terrain and its locals into avatars for all humanity—yet he does so without losing their particular, essential qualities. The vivacity of his writing is rivaled only by the vibrancy of the story.
—Bethanne Patrick, The Book Maven