December / 1999
The Bookshelf

Bad girls and white whales
by:  

In Deep Dixie (Alabaster Books, $9.99), popular Kentucky author Annie Jones entertains readers with a story set in Fulton's Dominion, Mississippi. Protagonist Dixie Fulton-Leigh is determined to make the best of life after the death of her father, but along the way she runs into a formidable opponent named Riley Walker. He is a hardworking, determined single parent. She is wealthy, headstrong, and beautiful. Only "the good Lord" and Fulton-Leigh's oldest ally, Miss Lettie, can help Dixie overcome this challenging man.

Liz Curtis Higgs' Bad Girls of the Bible: And What We Can Learn From Them (Waterbrook Press, $12.95) loosely fits modern tales to biblical stories as teaching tools for her discussion of "the bad girls" of the Bible. With wit and conviction, Higgs dissects the lessons of Eve, Delilah, Sapphira, and others. Then, with compassion, she suggests ways in which women and men can call upon biblical verse for the strength to defend themselves from sin.

In Sporty Creek (University Press of Kentucky, $9.95), former Poet Laureate of Kentucky James Still captures life in the Appalachian mountains of Kentucky during the Great Depression. In this collection of short stories, a young boy recounts growing up in coal-mining camps and on "Old Place," the family homestead. The wide-eyed boy learns to plow behind an ornery mule and to gamble on a gaming rooster. The young "tadwacker's" family gracefully endures the hard times caused by the boom and bust of coal. They wear "clodhoppers" and eat "Irishmen" to get by until the government takes "the peg off coal." Sporty Creek can be enjoyed by young and old alike, read to oneself or shared aloud.

Home Sweet Kentucky (Plum Lick Publishing, $18.95) by David and Lalie Dick is a collection of portraits of Kentuckians. It reveals that Kentucky's wealth is in its people. The authors bring to light the "quiet lives" of Kentuckians like young Leslie Kendrick, a Paintsville native and current Rhodes scholar, and Medra "Mickey" Hays, a Fayette County bookbinder who works from her home. Also included are the authors' own editorial essays about important issues, people, and places in the state.

Sena Jeter Naslund's mythic adventure story, Ahab's Wife or, The Star-Gazer (William Morrow, $28.00), will deeply engage readers. Set in the 19th century, this novel spins a parallel tale to that of Herman Melville's Moby Dick. But this story is told by Captain Ahab's wife, a woman with strength and courage. Readers meet her just as the Pequod sets sail from Nantucket, Massachusetts, on a quest for whale oil. Readers get a sense of the sadness the protagonist feels at surrendering her husband to his perilous journey. Yet as she watches the white sails of the Pequod reach the horizon, she considers the forces that compel her to take her own journey.

Island Magic (Simon & Schuster, $16.00), a children's story written by Martha Bennett Stiles and illustrated by Daniel San Souci, tells the touching story of a young boy and his grandfather. Grandparents and grandchildren will enjoy this tale of how the narrator helps his grandfather overcome his grief by sharing with him the magic of life on Grosse Ile.