Go into this one expecting every Southern cliche and you will not be disappointed. In the first section, the story is fairly original though moderately uninteresting. In the second and third sections, the story starts to pickup, and the predictable To Kill a Mockingbird type plot begins to unfold. Throw in Elmer Gantry and O'Connor's "Good Country People" and you pretty well understand where this one is going.
Well written and entertaining- if you don't mind the Southern bashing cliches being used to carry the plot and the predictability of a Wile E. Coyote cartoon.
**Spoilers**
Assuming the typical cliches would be used, one can pretty well predict where a character was going upon introduction. Some examples:
- Revival Preacher- total charlatan, obvious Elmer Gantry type, know he's going to take advantage of Evie
- Albert- this guy isn't going to last long, probably will be lynched in his fight for civil rights
- Robert Turnbull- quintessential WASP and he's rich- you know he's going to do something bad, particularly because he (predictably) has marital problems.
- Janey Louise- one of the first students used in school integration, probably not going to go well for her though she is too central to the story to kill, so that gives a general idea.
Does this predictability make the book bad? I don't know, but for me I grow bored and weary of the same old, same old. Maybe if I had not read as many books along these general lines I would have enjoyed this book. But as it is, I was simply aggravated.