A legendary artist vanishes at the height of his career. To discover what happened and why, a childhood friend immerses himself in their shared history and in the events of a generation growing up between World War II and the sixties in Mississippi.
Born in Tupelo, Mississippi in 1943, I grew up in the Deep South and later moved to New York and later still to Olympia, Washington. I am a painter as well as a writer and continue to show in galleries in the Seattle and Tacoma areas. I write regular art and theater reviews for area newspapers. I am also a gay rights activist. Although not autobiographical, the settings settings for my novels are the places where I have lived, and my personal involvement in the arts and glbt issues play a large role. My novels are self-published. My first two novels, "Until the Dawn" and "Imprudent Zeal," are about artists. "The Wives of Marty Winters," a work in progress, is about a newspaper editor and gay rights activist. All three are family sagas covering many decades.
This book is an insider's view of 1950's life in the South, and a glimpse of the New York art scene when one of Mississippi's expatriots finds himself in the midst of critical acceptance as an artist du jour. Author Alec Clayton wraps class, race, sexuality and family in a tortillia of mystery, and serves up a colorful, satisfying meal for any smart reader.
Excellent read! Love the juxtaposition between mystery and art. The "Southern Voice" is one I respond to and enjoy in the works of other writers, Zora Neal Hurston, Faulkner, Taylor Caldwell come to mind.