The Dry Grass of August is Anna Jean Mayhew's first published work of fiction. She presently resides just outside of the Raleigh-Durham, NC area.
"A beautiful book that fans of The Help will enjoy."
--Karen White, New York Times bestselling author
"Mayhew keeps the story taut, thoughtful and complex, elevating it
from the throng of coming-of-age books." --Publishers Weekly
"A must-read for fans of The Help." --Woman's World
"Written with unusual charm, wonderful dialogue, and a deeply felt
sense of time and place, The Dry Grass of August is a
book for adults and young people both--a beautifully written
literary novel that is a real page-turner, I have to add. Fast,
suspenseful, and meaningful. I read this book straight through."
--Lee Smith, author of Last Girls and Fair and
Tender Ladies
"Because the novel is totally true to Jubie's point of view, it
generates gripping drama as we watch her reach beyond authority to
question law and order." --Booklist
"A masterful work of blending time and place." --The Charlotte
Observer
"A beautifully written and important novel. Set in the 1950s South,
it deals with race relations in an original, powerful way. It's
also a great story about complicated family relationships, told
with humor, delicacy, and penetrating insight. I wish I had written
this book." -- Angela Davis-Gardner, author of Butterfly's
Child
"Anna Jean Mayhew has a true ear for Southern speech. . .The Dry
Grass of August is a carefully researched, beautifully
written, quietly told tale of love and despair and a look backward
at the way it was back then in the South." --The
Pilot (Southern Pines, North Carolina)
"Deeply felt, lasting relationships formed in the mid-20th century
South between white families and the African-American women who
took care of them. In The Dry Grass of August, Mayhew
explores the love and conflicting loyalties in one such extended
family, adult and child, black and white. She does so with honesty
and sympathy, intimate knowledge and valuable perspective, as well
as beautiful writing. This is an important story about the Southern
experience and the women who helped to form the American generation
now at the peak of its powers." --Peggy Payne, author
of Sister India
"Once you've experienced The Dry Grass of August, you'll
swiftly see that Anna Jean Mayhew's debut novel deserves all the
early praise it's getting. . .the power, bravery and beauty of
Mayhew's narrative is beyond contestation and well-deserving of a
wide readership." --BookPage
"An extraordinary, absorbing novel." --Historical Novel Reviews
"A beautiful book that fans of The Help will enjoy." --Karen
White, New York Times bestselling author
"Mayhew keeps the story taut, thoughtful and complex, elevating it
from the throng of coming-of-age books." --Publishers
Weekly
"A must-read for fans of The Help." --Woman's
World
"Written with unusual charm, wonderful dialogue, and a deeply felt
sense of time and place, The Dry Grass of August is a book
for adults and young people both--a beautifully written literary
novel that is a real page-turner, I have to add. Fast, suspenseful,
and meaningful. I read this book straight through." --Lee Smith,
author of Last Girls and Fair and Tender Ladies
"Because the novel is totally true to Jubie's point of view, it
generates gripping drama as we watch her reach beyond authority to
question law and order." --Booklist
"A masterful work of blending time and place." --The Charlotte
Observer
"A beautifully written and important novel. Set in the 1950s South,
it deals with race relations in an original, powerful way. It's
also a great story about complicated family relationships, told
with humor, delicacy, and penetrating insight. I wish I had written
this book." -- Angela Davis-Gardner, author of Butterfly's
Child
"Anna Jean Mayhew has a true ear for Southern speech. . .The Dry
Grass of August is a carefully researched, beautifully written,
quietly told tale of love and despair and a look backward at the
way it was back then in the South." --The Pilot (Southern
Pines, North Carolina)
"Deeply felt, lasting relationships formed in the mid-20th century
South between white families and the African-American women who
took care of them. In The Dry Grass of August, Mayhew
explores the love and conflicting loyalties in one such extended
family, adult and child, black and white. She does so with honesty
and sympathy, intimate knowledge and valuable perspective, as well
as beautiful writing. This is an important story about the Southern
experience and the women who helped to form the American generation
now at the peak of its powers." --Peggy Payne, author of Sister
India
"Once you've experienced The Dry Grass of August, you'll
swiftly see that Anna Jean Mayhew's debut novel deserves all the
early praise it's getting. . .the power, bravery and beauty of
Mayhew's narrative is beyond contestation and well-deserving of a
wide readership." --BookPage
"An extraordinary, absorbing novel." --Historical Novel
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