The Crocodile Bride

Available
Product Details
Price
$17.00  $15.81
Publisher
Hub City Press
Publish Date
Pages
296
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.9 X 0.7 inches | 0.85 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9798885740333

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About the Author
Ashleigh Bell Pedersen's fiction has been featured in New Stories from the South, The Kenyon Review, The Iowa Review, Design Observer, The Silent History, A Strange Object, and the New York Public Library's Library Simplified app. Her story "Small and Heavy World" was a finalist for both Best American Short Stories and a Pushcart Prize, and her story "Crocodile" won The Masters Review 2020 Flash Fiction Contest. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Pittsburgh, where she was the recipient of a teaching fellowship and Turow-Kinder Award. She currently resides in Austin, Texas.
Reviews

"The Crocodile Bride, the debut novel by Ashleigh Bell Pedersen, is a gripping family saga about the power of storytelling -- especially its ability to warm and soften the edges of cold, harsh reality. Pedersen creates a world at once tragic and beautiful, violent and magical, desperately impoverished yet rich in meaning." --Tina Chambers, Chapter16

"The brackish setting allows for anger, fear, love and despair to all be felt as one. And the author delicately handles the messy union between human culpability and generational damage." --Fiona Mozley, The New York Times


"Pedersen's expert character development and winding plot is aided by short, clipped chapters that bounce back and forth in time, showing the differing perspectives of women in Sunshine's family. Pedersen skillfully crafts a slow burn of a novel that eventually opens up to expose generations of family secrets, and more importantly, the value of unearthing truth." --Booklist


"Pedersen's stunning debut depicts difficult subjects like alcohol addiction, domestic violence, and sexual abuse. While Sunshine is the central figure, the legacy of family trauma is told by several generations of Turner women. Ultimately, that trauma can subside when women share their secrets, stumbling over the language needed to tell what happened both around and to them. Fans of fiction about Southern women or about the formative years of girlhood will love this quick, captivating read that tugs at the heartstrings." --Library Journal


"Told with vision and compassion, The Crocodile Bride is a novel about a strong-minded, resourceful girl who breaks from her dark family history and hopes to live out a better story herself." --Foreword Reviews


"Ashleigh Pedersen's The Crocodile Bride brings us Sunshine, an unforgettable girl who stands alongside our region's greatest literary protagonists. As Sunshine and her family face a transformative summer together, the author captures the secrets of the Louisiana bayou perfectly--its spooky fairytale magic, the brooding fortitude of its denizens. With indelible images and a beautifully crafted, multigenerational cast, The Crocodile Bride cradles us confidently as we watch this mystic, poignant saga unfold through the fractured lens of Southern childhood." --Leah Hampton, author of F*ckface


"Ashleigh Bell Pedersen reinvents the coming-of-age story. In her gifted hands, the world of budding girlhood is dangerous, marvelous, and strange. This novel is transcendent." --Irina Reyn, author of What Happened to Anna K. and Mother Country


"I can't stop thinking about this brilliant debut novel about generational secrets and family silences, and the healing powers of storytelling. In the sweltering, lush, rich landscape of rural Louisiana circa 1982--with swamps, crocodiles, Junebugs, myths, and ghosts--11-year-old Sunshine Turner is acutely perceptive and heartbreakingly trusting, and a resilient survivor. With echoes of Carson McCullers and Dorothy Allison, Ashleigh Bell Pedersen writes in a style all her own. The Crocodile Bride is a generous, tender novel with unforgettable characters and a perfect, transcendent ending." --Carter Sickels, author of The Prettiest Star

"Pedersen's novel--a rich layering of tales told, lived, and imagined--is a reminder of the power of story: to explain difficult truths, to illustrate possible outcomes, and even to offer a path toward a better life." --Necessary Fiction

"It is nouveau Southern Gothic spiced with fairytale and human fallibility, and it belongs on any bookshelf where remarkable regional fiction proves its universal appeal." --Stephanie Hunt, The Post and Courier