Reviews!

To any authors/publishers/ tour companies that are looking for the reviews that I signed up for please know this is very hard to do. I will be stopping reviews temporarily. My husband passed away February 1st and my new normal is a bit scary right now and I am unable to concentrate on a book to do justice to the book and authors. I will still do spotlight posts if you wish it is just the reviews at this time. I apologize for this, but it isn't fair to you if I signed up to do a review and haven't been able to because I can't concentrate on any books. Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly April 2nd 2024

04 January 2015

Island Fog by John Vanderslice Review!!



“This island feels like some mad doctor’s lab experiment”—so says one of the fictional residents of Nantucket Island, the setting of John Vanderslice’s extraordinary story collection Island Fog.  But Vanderslice is by no means a mad doctor, though he is definitely one insanely talented writer.  In the eleven literary experiments that comprise his book, he brilliantly parses the soul of America from 1795 to 2005 through the microcosm of Nantucket Island.  To borrow the words of yet another of his characters, he conveys “the awful weight of history pressing down upon the island” and conveys it so viscerally that we feel that “time has stopped or has circled around on itself” and we are “back inside that living spiraling body, that awful protean force” that was, and is, not just the island but America.  This is a book that anyone interested in the grand, failed experiment that is America should read.  It will open your eyes, and your heart.

David Jauss, author of  Glossolalia and Black Maps

In this quirky yet captivating collection of ten stories and two novellas, all set on Nantucket, the island is both microcosm and prism, through which the reader catches illuminated glimpses of American life, from the hard, dangerous times of the whaling community to the present-day tony resort of the super-wealthy—and yet the same problems beset the inhabitants through the centuries: racism, class exploitation, sexual identity, envy and fidelity. The essence of all the fictions is “the awful weight of history pressing down upon the island”, and in a twenty-first century America struggling to reconstruct its identity, the reader cannot but hope that the idyllic and mythic island might give us a clue about who we are. And yet in the final novella, “Island Fog”, a chilling tour-de-force worthy of Chesterton or Borges, we find ourselves in a place so far from reality that, like its hapless and trapped protagonist, we wonder if we are doomed to play parts in someone else’s fantasies forever. John Vanderslice is a writer of vision and this is a haunting, essential collection.   

Garry Craig Powell, author of Stoning the Devil  

John Vanderslice's Island Fog is far more than just a collection of stories. Tied together by a place and its history, the collection tells the story of Nantucket Island through the desperate lives and conflicts, hopes and sorrows of its inhabitants. I began reading the collection assuming it was for folks who have known or loved Nantucket and by the third story I was convinced that Island Fog is for anyone who loves good stories, beautifully told, with a good slice of the twisted history of humanity thrown in.”

Robert Hicks, author of The Widow of the South and A Separate Country

Press Release:

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Cover Images for promotional purposes:

Small image for email.



My Thoughts

Nantucket is an island south of Cape Cod, state of Massachusetts and this is where Island Fog takes place. A series of short stories that all take place on this island starting in 1795 to 2005. A chilling range of stories that feature believable characters, interesting plots and above all great writing. A very unique take on an island and it's people. The themes of the stories were about bigotry, jealousy, duplicity, greed, religious oppression, and murder. 

This is a book that you will want to read in one sitting if you can. Each stories just gets better overall written by an accomplished author who knows how to tell a story and definitely knows the history of Nantucket. I really enjoyed it!

I was given a copy of the book for review and was not monetarily compensated for said review.


1 comment:

  1. hey this sounds really interesting! I always enjoy a book that has multiple stories and tales for a place or group :)

    ReplyDelete

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