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"Billy Mitchell is twenty-two years old, college educated, and on the verge of entering high society - or whatever "high society" Tuscaloosa, Alabama, has to offer a young man in 1972. But when he falls in love with an inmate at his father's mental institution, Billy must either muster the courage to elope with his new love (which involves kidnapping her) or accept a prescribed - and unwelcome - role within the Southern patriarchy." "In the struggle to make sense of his situation, Billy uncovers a painful and complex past - including his own racist sentiments toward Nigel, his childhood companion, and his mother's death in a burning car with her lesbian lover during their flight from Tuscalo...
“The hipster cultural economy of the dot-com boom is skewered in this hilarious coming-of-age memoir.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review Glasgow Phillips published his debut novel Tuscaloosa at the tender age of twenty-four. The results were disastrous: encouraging reviews, translations, a paperback sale, a film option, and a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford. But over the next two years, as Phillips’s second novel unraveled and freelance journalism assignments ended in humiliation, a horrible, secret thought took hold in him: perhaps, just possibly, whatever talent he had was of the kind that would never be more than promise. Washed up as a “real” writer before he was thirty, Phil...
Containing a complete record of all the industries directly or indirectly connected with electricity and magnetism ...
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