The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat

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Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
Vintage
Publish Date
Pages
384
Dimensions
5.1 X 7.9 X 1.0 inches | 0.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780307950437

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About the Author

Edward Kelsey Moore lives in Chicago, where he has enjoyed a long career as a cellist. His short fiction has appeared in several literary magazines, including Indiana Review, African American Review, and Inkwell. His short story "Grandma and the Elusive Fifth Crucifix" was selected as an audience favorite on National Public Radio's Stories on Stage series.

Reviews
"Hilarious, heartwarming and poignant. . . . A rich and complicated yarn." --The Chicago Tribune

"Moore shows a seasoned ease with his funny, damaged subjects. . . . You'll be casting the movie by the second chapter." --Entertainment Weekly

"Moore has conjured up the story of an entire community and, at its sparkling center, a trio of memorable heroines." --Julia Glass, author of Three Junes

"Comparisons to The Help and Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe are inevitable, but Moore's take on this rowdy troupe of outspoken, lovable women has its own distinctive pluck." --Publishers Weekly

"Edward Kelsey Moore knows how to write a terrific, complex, believable, and always intriguing story." --The New York Journal of Books

"Edward Kelsey Moore has written a novel jam-packed with warmth, honesty, wit, travail, and just enough madcap humor to keep us giddily off-balance. . . . The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat is that rare and happy find: a book that delivers not only good story, but good company." --Leah Hager Cohen, author of The Grief of Others

"A gripping novel that weaves together the lives of three remarkable women, and does so with flair, wit, and tremendous heart." --Carolina De Robertis, author of Perla

"The author uses warmhearted humor and salty language to bring to life a tight-knit African-American community. . . . [Has] salt-of-the-earth characters like fearless Odette, motherless Barbara Jean, and sharp-tongued Clarice, along with an event-filled plot that readers will laugh and cry over." --Library Journal

"A novel of strong women, evocative memories and deep friendship." --Kirkus Reviews

"I am always a little suspicious of a male writer speaking for female characters, but Moore inhabits and enlarges the experience he creates so delightfully. A real triumph for a brilliant new novelist." --Suzanne Levine, author of How We Love Now: Women Talk About Intimacy after Fifty

"Edward Kelsey Moore's The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat had me nodding in recognition and laughing out loud when I wasn't crying. His delightful voice really rings true, bringing the unforgettable Odette, Clarice and Barbara Jean to vivid life on every page. --Connie Briscoe, author of Money Can't Buy Me Love

"The Supremes at Earl's-All-You-Can-Eat is a scrumptious delight! I can't wait for my old friends to get to know my new friends: Odette, Barbara Jean, and Clarice (not to mention Odette's pot-smoking mama and her friend Mrs. Roosevelt!)." --Carleen Brice, author of Orange Mint and Honey and Children of the Waters

"Funny and tenderhearted. . . . The most remarkable quality of The Supremes is love--the author's love for his characters, even the most flawed, shines from every page." --Shelf Awareness