1. How would you characterize Stephen's relationship with each of his parents? With his church and his religion? 2. What prospects of stability are offered to the community by the church? Instability? 3. How is the church important to Jack Umstead? 4. How is the setting (1950s, rural community) important to the story? 5. What might Alease see in Jack Umstead and why? Does he have any redeeming qualities? If so, what are they? 6. Discuss the significance of the title. 7. How are the major characters and the community changed by Umstead's visit? 8. How does shifting point of view aid or hinder your reading of this story? 9. How might a year-2000 visit by Jack Umstead to Listre, North Carolina, be different from the 1952 visit in Where Trouble Sleeps ? 10. How were your childhood views of God and religion different from those of Stephen? 11. How will Stephen's experiences as a child in Where Trouble Sleeps influence his life as an adolescent? As an adult? Which of the adults in the novel will he most resemble as an adult? 12. What events or experiences in your own childhood could become the basis for a novel?
Clyde Edgerton is widely considered one of the premier novelists working in the Southern tradition today, often compared with such masters as Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor.
Although most of his books deal with adult concerns--marriage, aging, birth and death--Edgerton's work is most profoundly about family. In books such as Raney, Walking Across Egypt, The Floatplane Notebooks, and Killer Diller, Edgerton explores the dimensions of family life, using an endearing (if eccentric) cast of characters. "Edgerton's characters," writes Mary Lystad in Twentieth-Century Young Adult Writers, "have more faults than most, but they also have considerable virtues, and they are so likable that you want to invite them over for a cup of coffee, a piece of homemade apple pie, and a nice long chat."
Raised in the small towns of the North Carolina Piedmont, Edgerton draws heavily on the storytelling traditions of the rural south in his novels. Without the distractions of big-city life and the communications revolution of the late twentieth century, many rural Americans stayed in close touch with their relatives, and often shared stories about family members with each other for entertainment.
Among Edgerton’s awards are: Guggenheim Fellowship; Lyndhurst Prize; Honorary Doctorates from UNC-Asheville and St. Andrews Presbyterian College; membership in the Fellowship of Southern Writers; the North Carolina Award for Literature; and five notable book awards from the New York Times.
Meh. This story seemed lost and rushed. The dog was cool and the time period made for some interesting descriptions but it felt like a blind date that you knew you had to get through but couldn’t wait to finish.
I really wanted to finish the books I was already reading before starting something new, but I couldn't resist a book that starts with "Alease Toomey sat at her dresser, putting on lipstick, getting ready to take her son to see the electric chair for the first time."!
In this story, the devil comes to Listre North Carolina in the guise of Jack Umstead. The story is seen through the eyes of six year old Stephen, who goes through town trying to figure out which residents in town will go to hell. Umstead goes through town plying his mischief. The story comes to a head when Umstead meets the church going Blaine sisters because he does not understand where trouble sleeps. Stephen witnesses as rootless amorality encounters deep rooted moral flexibility. It is more one-sided than it would seem. One of Edgerton's best.
I picked this book up two years ago and read it during lunch breaks. It was not compelling, nor a page turner, but it was a pleasant place to go for a little break. Then, one day, I got busy and stopped. I didn't feel a great loss. Reading this is very much just like sitting on a bench in a small town and watching the people live their ordinary lives around you. Which I think was what was intended and is pleasant in that aim. Many people did not enjoy or continue this book, and I agree, there is nothing "great" about it, and I clearly left it sitting for a very long time, but these last few days when I picked it back up, determined to finish, that quiet, observational time on a bench in rural NC was just what I needed. It is funny without being overt and it exposes ignorance, faith, hypocrisy, and a certain sweetness, all through anecdotal vignettes. There is a central story-line, but it is not aggressive. I read another Edgerton book a long time ago, Raney, and that one was pretty obviously humorous. This one is much more laid back and subtle, which is nice it its own way. I'm glad to have read it, but I won't be recommending it much.
Overall, this was a pretty good book. It reminded me of the writing of Flannery O'Conner with self-righteous hypocrites. The title refers to the dog named Trouble and the people of this small town would predict the weather based on where Trouble would have his nap. At times, I felt like characters were just thrown in and had nothing to do with the main story. I wasn't enamored with the author's writing style but it was a quick read.
Very slow to start. It just kinda jumps around characters with very little direction for the first 50 pages or so but once your learn the main ones and the plot develops a little it is a decent story.
A stranger comes to Listre, looking to see what he can shake out for his own profit. In the meantime, the people in the little town are living their lives. Mainly the story is told from the perspective of a six year old boy who spends a lot of time observing his world.
The best thing about this book was the interview put in as an extra where the author "interviews" his slick, trouble-making character, Jack Umstead. Otherwise, the book was generally easy to read, had enough dialect to feel genuine but not so much as to annoy the reader, but overall felt slow and uninteresting. These are characters working hard to maintain their existence, and they have histories and backgrounds, but they mostly amount to mildly interesting. The plot is rather thin; this is more of a novel about a place and the people in it.
Small-town North Carolina meets a bad apple who's out to seduce the town's women and rob everyone else, even the Baptist church. Does Listre stand a chance? Clyde Edgerton's hamlet is drawn with love and humor. In Listre, everyone knows everyone else's bidness, from the shotgun-toting old maid to the preacher who sins in his heart to the dog that forecasts the weather. Without giving anything away, I'll just note that small town doesn't mean simple-minded. The characters in Where Trouble Sleeps are folks you don't mind spending time with. Their accents are the real deal. I didn't notice any kudzu, but the geography rang true. And, the pace of the novel is just right: I sped through this like I've hastened through many a burg in North Carolina.
"Here, evil comes to sleepy Listre, N.C., circa 1950, in the form of a stranger with a pencil-thin mustache and a trunkful of dirty movies. Listre is the kind of rustic crossroads where the most exciting event in years was a collision between a mule and a pickup truck, where boys slip over to the Gulf station for a Nehi and a peek at the pinup calendar, and where everybody knows everybody else's secrets. It's the kind of place, in other words, where it seems like nothing ever changes - until the fateful day when everything changes at once."
I'm not sure what to say about this book. I simply loved Edgerton's "Walking Across Egypt," and I was hoping to be similarly entertained. I was not. This time, Listre, North Carolina, seemed peopled with only weirdos, not one of whom I could relate to or completely understand. The con-man drifter who stirs things up was believable, but the rest of the characters were not. I read the whole book hoping that at some point I'd grow to love it, but I'm not sure I even liked it all that much. A disappointment.
As a fan of Clyde Edgerton, I look for his work in used bookstores (otherwise hard to find) and came across this one in Charleston, SC. Although noted as a NY Times bestseller and full of his quirky characters and sense of humor, this one wasn’t on par with Raney, Walking Across Egypt and Killer Diller. Not my fav but still fun.
This book's depiction of characters, especially clueless women, living in a tiny Southern town in 1950 made me cringe. To add insult to injury, it was published in 1997 to rave reviews. Much of the book is written from the perspective of a six-year-old asthmatic boy who drinks from a bottle and gets a job shooting the heads off chickens for a penny a head. Edgerton is no Welty, trust me.
Quirky. I finished it because I kept thinking it was going to pick up. Never did. Small town, tried to develop quirky characters and undertone of Christian values but didn't work. Book description on back was inaccurate.
When I finished reading Where Trouble Sleeps, I thought about a quote by Frederick Buechner about the foolishness of God to allow "lamebrains, misfits, nit-pickers, holier-than-thous, oddducks, egomaniacs and closet sensualists." The reason that quip came to my mind is that Edgerton's book has about ALL of them as characters! Listre seems full of these folks.
Comical, satirical, and snarky, Edgerton gets underneath the reader's skin exposing the folly of our feigned innocence and southern veneer. Unfortunately, his is mostly a cynical tale.
Alease Toomey (mom) Stephen Toomey (her son) Uncle Raleigh ( Terry Daniels (neighbor kid) Cheryl Daniels (Terry's teenage sister) Jack Umstead (con man in a stolen Buick 8) The Blaine sisters ... set in Listre, NC, somewhere down east
Typical Edgerton. Funny, peculiar, realistic and ominous. You know you're building towards something, but with Edgerton, you have to go with the sideshow, see the world through his characters. I grew up with people like these. I almost cried in the chapter titled, "Just As I Am," because I have been right there in that situation before. It's quick read, and an easy read. Nothing that will keep up up at night but fun.
This book is set in the 1950’s, so it’s before my time. And it’s in a very small town. I didn’t fully catch a lot of the book’s subtle characteristics, but at least it’s in the south, and for that reason I enjoyed quite a bit. I’ve read several Clyde Edgerton books, and Listre is familiar to me. All told, a short and fun book, with a surprising ending which could have gone several different ways.
I did not think this book would ever end! I stuck with it only because I had read and enjoyed Raney, Walking Across Egypt, and Killer Diller by Clyde Edgerton. I wanted Where Trouble Sleeps to be humorous and engaging, but the plot was all over the place and hard to follow. I should have given up reading this book after the first chapter.
The book was set in Listre, North Carolina. I really liked some of the characters. They struggled with temptation and, just like any small town, all knew each others business. It is the story of a son’s search for salvation and a story of how the town deals with a visit from evil. I wish the ending were a bit better. It started out with so much promise.
interestingly enough i found it kind of boring and just whatever in the beginning but once i got into a groove(?), it grabbed my attention much more than i expected. in short, nothing particularly note worthy to me, but a nice short read that was easy to glide through. probably should’ve expected much more jesus discussion than i did lolol.
Never has it taken me so long to read such a short book. I just haven't been able to focus lately. It was somewhat of an interesting read, but didn't hold my attention. Reminded me of Erskine Caldwell's writing.
I hadn't spied a work by Clyde Edgerton's in years, but a discarded paperback, "Where Trouble Sleeps", was on a giveaway shelf at the Carrollton, Miss., library Thursday, so I grabbed it and finished reading it Sunday afternoon. Classic! Blam, blam, to the sneaky bad evil guys.