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EDISTO

Padgett Powell

When it was published in the UK, The Independent wrote: "[A] coming of age tale to rank alongside those of Holden Caulfield and Huckleberry Finn," While the Guardian wrote: "Line-for-line it's rarely less than laconically funny, and hardly a paragraph goes by without a poetic perception worthy of a latter-day Huck Finn."
A twelve-year-old boy chronicles his coming of age on Edisto, a rural strip of coast between Savannah and Charleston. Simons Manigault ("You say it 'Simmons.' I'm a rare one-m Simons") lives with his mother, an eccentric professor known locally as the Duchess, who is convinced her twelve-year-old son can become a writer of genius. She has immersed Simons in the literary classics since birth and has given him free rein to gather material in such spots as a nightclub called Marvin's R.O. Sweet Shop and Baby Grand. At the center of Simons's life on Edisto is an enigmatic character who tutors the boy in the art of watching the world without presumption. "Taurus," as he is dubbed by Simons, acts as a father surrogate as well, taking his precocious young charge in stride. He leads him to, among other discoveries, his first prizefight, date, and hangover. The way Simons sees the world will change radically when he leaves his ad-lib life among the denizens of Edisto for the private schools and tennis tournaments of Hilton Head, South Carolina - the territory of his father, "The Progenitor." Using the combination of a child's run-on phrasing and the vigorous prose and deft comic touches of a writer who is sure of every step, Padgett Powell established himself as a vivid new American writer. Padgett Powell is the author of six novels, including The Interrogative Mood and Edisto, which was a finalist for the National Book Award, and three collections of stories. His writing has appeared in The New Yorker , Harper's , and The Paris Review, as well as in The Best American Short Stories and The Best American Sports Writing. He has received a Whiting Award, the Rome Fellowship in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Powell lives in Gainesville, Florida.
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Book

Published 1984-10-12 by Farrar Straus Giroux

Comments

Edisto is snappy and funny and bizarre and resonant, a grand candidate for your summer's last and unlikeliest beach read. And if you love it as much as I think you will, you'll want to proceed to Edisto Revisited (1996), the even slimmer and stranger sequel, which reads like a triple-distillation of the original: I mean it goes down like a glug of everclear. Read more...