In 1994, the real Mid-South Ice Storm strikes the fictitious town of Bodock in Claygardner County, Mississippi. In the wake of the storm, what is left unbroken, and what broken things can be rebuilt? Hailed by Maurice Carlos Ruffin as “leaving no feeling untouched,” Robert Busby’s debut balances grit with heart, violence with depth, and tragedy with humor.
Two siblings survey the damage to their family’s orchard after the storm while their rich nephew circles in the hopes of buying up the property. A slacker divorcee drives his ex-father-in-law to his lung transplant surgery. A cop tries to piece his broken family back together in the wake of the loss of his son. In 1816, a farmer’s wife plots with an enslaved woman to stop her husband from committing a terrible act. And in a town that is not quite Bodock, a population of ghosts reckon with their unsettled pasts. In the spirit of Brad Watson’s Last Days of the Dog-Men, Bodock traverses time and dimensions to surface the struggles of the everyday.
Bodock: Stories is the winner of the 2024 C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize.
Robert Busby grew up in the hill country of North Mississippi and has worked as a bandsaw operator, bookseller, copywriter, driving school instructor, prep cook, produce clerk, teacher, and satellite television technician. His debut collection, Bodock: Stories, was awarded the C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize and will be published by Hub City Press in June 2025. A graduate of the University of Mississippi, he got his MFA in Fiction from Florida International University, and his stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Arkansas Review, Cold Mountain Review, Footnote, Mississippi Noir, PANK, Pleiades, Sou’wester, Surreal South, and others. Currently, he writes, runs, and raises two humans with his wife in Memphis, TN.
Really enjoyed this gritty and propulsive collection of stories set in North Mississippi in the mid 90s. All the characters are compelling, especially when they’re behaving badly. The writing is excellent.
Busby’s small town in the North Mississippi hill country is fictional, but the time frame is chillingly (for those of us who remember it) real — the 1994 Mid-South Ice Storm. (It’s one of the two iconic weather events of my nearly 40 years in Memphis, along with 2003’s Hurricane Elvis windstorm.) My favorite in the collection is a cracking good ghost story, “Twenty Mile,” that I enjoyed so much I found myself wishing it were the start of a novel, set in the spectral town of the title, in that “province of ghosts.” The rest of the book is more grounded in gritty reality, though you might sense a ghost there, too — of the great Larry Brown. Highly recommended. (Hub City Press, 2025).
Busby is an excellent writer, with crisp, poignant and engrossing storytelling. I love short stories, and these were varied yet centering on the town of Burdock, MS and its colorful inhabitants. The last story, Offerings, is the longest and the best - but despite the clear links to Bodock, felt like it was from a different book.
I bought this book for the title—my brothers and I used to have to cut up Bodock trees for firewood. This guy’s style reminded me some of Larry Brown. I enjoyed the stories and how they loosely connected.
Whew. There are a number of stories worth reading in this collection, but "Offerings" is the crown jewel. Gut punch and catharsis, it both ties the collection together and flags the author as a considerable talent.