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Slow Way Home by Michael Morris — book cover

Slow Way Home

by Michael Morris
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Overview

On the surface, Brandon Willard seems like your average eight-year-old boy. He loves his mama, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and G. I. Joe. But Brandon's life is anything but typical.

Wise beyond his years, Brandon understands he's the only one in this world he can count on. It's an outlook that serves him well the day his mama leaves him behind at the Raleigh bus station and sets off to Canada with "her destiny" — the latest man that she hopes will bring her happiness. The day his mother leaves, Brandon takes the first step toward shaping his own destiny. Soon he sends himself spending pleasant days playing with his cousins on his grandparents' farm and trying to forget the past. In the safety of that place, Brandon finally is able to trust the love of an adult to help iron out the wiry places until his nerves are as steady as any other boy's.

But when Sophie Willard shows up a year later with a determined look in her eye and a new man in tow, Brandon's grandparents ignore a judge's ruling and flee the state with Brandon. Creating a new life and identity in a small Florida town, Brandon meets the people who will fill him with self-worth and self-respect. He slowly becomes involved with "God's Hospital," a church run by the gregarious Sister Delores, a woman who is committed to a life of service for all members of the community, black and white, regardless of some townsfolk's disapproval.

Synopsis

On the surface, Brandon Willard seems like your average eight-year-old boy. He loves his mama, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and G. I. Joe. But Brandon's life is anything but typical.

Wise beyond his years, Brandon understands he's the only one in this world he can count on. It's an outlook that serves him well the day his mama leaves him behind at the Raleigh bus station and sets off to Canada with "her destiny" -- the latest man that she hopes will bring her happiness. The day his mother leaves, Brandon takes the first step toward shaping his own destiny. Soon he sends himself spending pleasant days playing with his cousins on his grandparents' farm and trying to forget the past. In the safety of that place, Brandon finally is able to trust the love of an adult to help iron out the wiry places until his nerves are as steady as any other boy's.

But when Sophie Willard shows up a year later with a determined look in her eye and a new man in tow, Brandon's grandparents ignore a judge's ruling and flee the state with Brandon. Creating a new life and identity in a small Florida town, Brandon meets the people who will fill him with self-worth and self-respect. He slowly becomes involved with "God's Hospital," a church run by the gregarious Sister Delores, a woman who is committed to a life of service for all members of the community, black and white, regardless of some townsfolk's disapproval.

The Washington Post

The reader may hear echoes of Harper Lee in his focus on racial conflict, or of Flannery O'Connor's Southern grotesques...or even of Huck Finn if Huck had confronted the demands of the Episcopal Church...But Morris has his own voice and his own story, and he tells it with uncommon skill and compassion.—Patrick Anderson

About the Author, Michael Morris

A fifth-generation native of Perry, Florida, a rural area near Tallahassee, Michael Morris knows southern culture and characters. It is the foundation and inspiration for the stories and novels he writes.

Upon graduating from Auburn University, Michael worked for U.S. Senator Bob Graham and then became a sales representative for pharmaceutical companies. As a sales representative, Michael decided to follow a life-long desire and began writing in the evenings. The screenplay he penned during this time is still someplace in the bottom of a desk drawer.

It is when Michael accepted a position in government affairs and moved to North Carolina that he began to take writing more seriously. While studying under author Tim McLaurin, Michael started writing the story that would eventually become his first novel, A Place Called Wiregrass. The novel was released in April, 2002 and is currently in its third printing. A Place Called Wiregrass was named a Booksense 76 selection by members of the American Independent Booksellers Association as and is part of the southern literature curriculum at two universities. Michael's latest novel, Slow Way Home, will be released by Harper Collins on September 23 and his work can be seen in the southern anthology Stories From The Blue Moon CafÉ II.

Michael and his wife, Melanie, reside in Fairhope, Alabama.

Reviews

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Editorials

Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal

"Brandon Willard may well be one of the most endearing novel narrators since Scout Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird."

Mobile Register

"[B]oth contemporary and timeless...read the book and savor for yourself Brandon’s redemption ...."

Tampa Tribune (Florida)

“Slow Way Home is one of those rare finds....it should become a classic.”

Booklist

"a compulsively readable novel with many fine passages on the importance of home and the comforts of faith."

The Birmingham News

"Michael Morris is someone to watch .. .[Slow Way Home is] courageous and heartbreaking and moving...."

Gadsden Times (Northeast AL)

"[A] tour de force... told in a Southern style that invites readers in and asks them to stay awhile."

Washington Post

"… echoes of Harper Lee…or of Flannery O’Connor’s Southern grotesques . . . or even of Huck Finn…. "

Dallas Morning News

"An emotionally charged work that is as timely as it is touching."

BookPage

"Morris excels in creating the child’s voice.... an inspiring portrait of a true survivor."

Homer Hickam

"Slow Way Home is a warm, witty, fresh, and innovative novel."

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

"...impressive achievement...entertaining and affecting."

Lee Smith

"Slow Way Home is a gem — both gritty and heartwarming at once. A wonderful, emotional read."

Anne Rivers Siddons

"Slow Way Home is a novel for the heart. It is pitch perfect and the character Brandon is going to linger in a lot of minds. The opening chapter is one of the most poignant and poweful I have ever read. This is a fine book."

Tim Farrington

"A gentle story suffused with brutal truths, almost fable-like in its resonant simplicity.....a journey well worth taking."

Silas House

"In a remarkably consistent narrative voice, Morris takes us along for a moving, funny ride..."

Richard Paul Evans

"Slow Way Home is a journey of the human spirit and its themes... make it a novel for the ages."

Lynne Hinton

"Master storyteller Michael Morris has delivered another stunning novel….touching, truthful, and beautifully written. It is not to be missed!"

Southern Scribe

"[E]motional and fast-paced . . . the social issues covered make this an intelligent book for debate."

(Florida) - Tampa Tribune

"Slow Way Home is one of those rare finds....it should become a classic."

Donna M Butts

"Morris’ insightful book gives voice to the struggle millions of grandparents and the grandchildren in their care face everyday."

Booklist

a compulsively readable novel with many fine passages on the importance of home and the comforts of faith.

The Washington Post

The reader may hear echoes of Harper Lee in his focus on racial conflict, or of Flannery O'Connor's Southern grotesques...or even of Huck Finn if Huck had confronted the demands of the Episcopal Church...But Morris has his own voice and his own story, and he tells it with uncommon skill and compassion.—Patrick Anderson

Publishers Weekly

A Southern boy becomes a pawn in a dicey custody battle in Morris's uneven second novel, which begins when eight-year-old Brandon Willard's drug addict mother, Sophie, runs off to Canada with the latest man in her life and leaves Brandon with his grandparents in North Carolina. Things unravel with the boyfriend in a hurry, but Sophie's parents refuse to return Brandon, intending to provide him with a stable home. After a court battle, Sophie is awarded custody, but Brandon's grandparents take off with the boy and head for southern Florida, changing their last name to Davidson. Trouble follows the trio after they settle down in a remote fishing village. The African-American church they join is burned down by the Klan after their ill-advised attempt at integration, and Brandon is interviewed by a local TV news crew about the incident. The publicity results in the arrest of his grandparents, and Brandon is returned to Sophie, who has yet another erratic, dangerous boyfriend in tow. In a far-fetched plot twist, the boy is rescued from her clutches by a North Carolina state senator, who remembers Brandon from a school class visit and decides to take him in. Morris's storytelling is solid in the early going, and he makes a credible effort to capture a child's viewpoint, but many of the sets pieces are insistently maudlin. Questionable plot twists-would Brandon's grandparents really leave everything behind?-and treacly writing make this a lackluster follow-up to Morris's well-regarded debut, A Place Called Wiregrass. (Sept. 4) Forecast: A 14-city Southern author tour should help push regional sales, but even those who made A Place Called Wiregrass a surprise hit (40,000 copies were sold in less than a year) may find Morris's second novel a disappointment. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School-Will eight-year-old Brandon ever have a permanent, happy home? When his mother runs off with her boyfriend, she sends him to her parents on the bus and disappears, but later, when he has been doing well with them, she threatens to take him back. To keep him safe, the grandparents run from the courts and move further south, where they make friends with both black people and rednecks. Realistic dialogue, including the "n" word, accurately portrays both the integration problems and the role of the church in the South of the early 1970s. The use of the first person enables readers to feel the boy's pain, determination, and desire not to be pitied. He must find strength within himself. Readers find out what happens to these involving characters in an epilogue. A touching, tender story for fans of Nicholas Sparks.-Claudia Moore, W. T. Woodson High School, Fairfax, VA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2004
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060727673

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