The Midnight Cool

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$18.99
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publish Date
Pages
384
Dimensions
5.2 X 7.9 X 0.9 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780062475473

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author

Lydia Peelle is the author of the novel The Midnight Cool and the story collection Reasons For and Advantages of Breathing, which received an honorable mention for the PEN/Hemingway Award. She received her MFA from the University of Virginia and has been a fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Ucross, Yaddo, and Ragdale. Peelle is a recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, an O. Henry Prize, the National Book Foundation's "5 Under 35" honor, and a Whiting Award, as well as the Anahid Award for Emerging Armenian-American writers. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

Reviews

"A drama about the speciousness of the American dream and the costs of self-invention...The novel resists trite resolution. We may write our own stories, it suggests, but we can't predict our endings." -- New Yorker

"A poetic knitting of historical fiction and contemporary parable. . . . Peelle spins an American tale that explores the nature of love and tragedy, and the complicated connections between humans and animals." -- Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"Fully imagined...affecting...Billy's longer and fuller life makes him the more vibrant of the two characters, but the mysteries of Charles's fate propel the book...THE MIDNIGHT COOL is undergirded by the considerable agility and charm of Peelle's voice, and by her deeply attuned love of nature." -- New York Times

"Peelle's sad, swirling tale teems with grabby historical minutiae...Thankfully, the narrative's multifarious hard-luck stories are also leavened with cunning flashes of humor." -- New York Times Book Review

"Peelle is a writer to watch. She deftly recounts the surprisingly fascinating history of mules, who bore the brunt of American labor during the period and whose resiliency and strength made them key players in the war effort, while also giving us a rich, satisfying novel, full of memorable characters grappling with love, loyalty, identity and the struggle to build something that lasts in a rapidly changing world." -- Bookpage

"Dazzling...THE MIDNIGHT COOL is a masterfully crafted novel of victory and defeat, longing, discovery and treachery, featuring a cast of characters portrayed with such depth as to become memorable long after we close the cover." -- Bookreporter.com

"I was taken in by every line in THE MIDNIGHT COOL. When I finished the last page I held the book tight for a moment and then flipped back to begin again. In this debut, Peelle uses her remarkable talent to remind the reader that we - all of us - are at the mercy of so many things beyond our control, and that life goes quickly, and that we only get one. I feel certain that only in Peelle's hands could I feel as moved by the flicker of kinship between a horse and a mule as I did for the love between the human beings who live in these pages. This is a great story." -- Mary Beth Keane, author of FEVER and THE WALKING PEOPLE

"Dark and delightful and achingly authentic, this is an exquisite story of love, war, sex, death, and mules. They say mules have the best features of donkeys and horses, and the same is true of THE MIDNIGHT COOL--it's both tough and athletic, smart and fast, vigorous and lithe. I couldn't ask for a more beautiful book." -- Eleanor Henderson, author of TEN THOUSAND SAINTS

"Satisfying...[reads] like a cross between Faulkner's 'Spotted Horses' and Fitzgerald's 'The Last of the Belles.'" -- Publishers Weekly

"I was taken in by every line in THE MIDNIGHT COOL. When I finished the last page I held the book tight for a moment and then flipped back to begin again. In this debut, Peelle uses her remarkable talent to remind the reader that we - all of us - are at the mercy of so many things beyond our control, and that life goes quickly, and that we only get one. I feel certain that only in Peelle's hands could I feel as moved by the flicker of kinship between a horse and a mule as I did for the love between the human beings who live in these pages. This is a great story." -- Kirkus

"Set in Tennessee in 1916, Lydia Peelle's fiction debut is a wonderful tale of failure and success, striving and bootstrapping, and the ethical quandaries thereof in the United States a century ago...A wonderfully astute novel that observes human greed alongside the ineffable human desire for connection." -- Read It Forward

"Nobody writes about equines like Lydia Peelle, a prose stylist we already know to be tough, tender, and exact. In THE MIDNIGHT COOL she restores to the American South just before World War I the thousands upon thousands of mules who did the nation's work at that time, especially the famous Tennessee mule, uncommonly intelligent, uncannily strong, often big and beautiful. Without reproductive futures, mules, like most of us, know they only live once, and nothing but luck determines whether life will be cruel or kind. Against the backdrop of millions of mules being shipped off to war, Peelle tells a human love story that charms, instructs, and makes us cry for the squandered lives of animals and men." -- Jaimy Gordon, author of LORD OF MISRULE, National Book Award Winner in Fiction

"THE MIDNIGHT COOL was written a hundred years after the events it describes, but it reads with the force and charisma of a writer describing her own time. It plunges you into the Tennessee of the 1910s, into the First World War, into high-stakes mule-trading, most affectingly into the ardors and errors of the people caught up in this extraordinary story. It makes you feel the urgency of every choice they make. The authority of Peelle's prose is total." -- Salvatore Scibona, author of THE END

"Peelle is a masterful storyteller who has honed her craft with short stories and the collection Reasons for and Advantages of Breathing. The Midnight Cool, her first novel, is rich with voice and in detail, the sense of place as familiar as her own backyard." -- Memphis Flyer