Reviews

Eveningland: Stories by Michael Knight

commensurate's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

It was OK. It was all about rich white people in Mobile. I am a white person from Alabama so a lot of it was slightly nostalgic for me in a way that I both enjoyed and resented. The last story, the long one, is pretty good. I feel like he could have just published that one like a novella and it would have been better. The rest sound like they come from an undergrad creative writing class. A lot of telling and not a lot of showing. Cheesy characters. Quick read, some good ideas, not a waste of time, but not life-changing.

saarahn's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

A good collection

Story #1 Water and Oil
This is the first story in the book, it begins and is told like an old country song. About a boy and his first love, and his first heart break. His transition into becoming a man, and the inevitability of his future loves and losses.
It was written in a descriptive prose, this was consistent throughout the story. We learn about the boy, through an older man who serves as a narrator for the tale:

'The boy’s name was Henry Rufus Bragg and though he was seventeen years old and would most likely have been offended by my description, there was still enough boy about him that the word remains appropriate. He was handsome but in an unfinished way..... A late bloomer, his mother called him, the last of the model airplane builders, a tender boy, a quiet boy, an odd and earnest boy who, like the keeper of some lost art, memorized old knockknock jokes and repeated them in his head when he was bored.'

I was drawn to the sophisticated style of description. I loved it.

Story #2 Smash and Grab
n this short story we encounter a burglary gone wrong. We learn that Cashdollar is an expert thief, he is quick on his feet and has never had a run in with the law. That is until he is caught by a teenage girl, she knocks him out, and he wakes to find himself taped to a chair, bruised. He learns that she is the daughter of the owner if the house, and she calls the police on Cashdollar. By a weird and surprising turn of events she manipulates the situation for her own benefit.

This story wasn't as descriptive, but it was definitely unpredictable.

Story #3 Our lady of the Roses
A chapter in the life of Hadley, an art teacher at a Catholic school. In some ways, she is lost and confused as ber students. She doesn't necessarily have a plan, and she doesn't so much agree with how religion restricts her curriculum. She's carving her own path in the world, and learns something from a fellow Sister.

Story #4 Jubilee
Kendra and Dean, a middle-aged couple living life, Dean's birthday is fast approaching and Kendra takes care to organise a party for him. Their son will be coming with a date, oh how the years have passed them by. On the night of the party, Dean experiences huge anxiety, everything seems unfamiliar, and everyone seems to be speaking in an unrecognizable language. But they must let the party run its course, see it through to its end.

I liked this story, it really was like a family sharing a small but very important time with a special guest- the reader. It didn't feel like intrusion but, a warm invitation and welcome.

Story #5 A grand old party
A man thinking about shooting his unfaithful wife, or perhaps the man she is with. He gets inside the guy's house, and it goes from there...

Story #6 King of Dauphin island
The story of a man grieving the passing of his wife, while working out the best way to help himself and his daughters find their way, so he heads off to find his way. He sells the house and proceeds to create a new life.

Story #7 Landfall
This story is probably the most complicated to explain, in this book.

There's a family: mother, father, and three kids. Two of the kids have their own kids, Doodle has two girls, and Angus has one boy. Percy is the third child, unmarried and single. The father has passed away, the mother lives alone. She's always crafting chores and tasks to occupy her time, still she mourns her husband's passing.

With a hurricane fast approaching, they all have to get to safety. Relatively easy, except Doodle quickly discovers her mom has suffered a fall in her bathroom which is flooding under a pool of water. She has injured her head severely, and her memory has become impaired. Doodle is alone in figuring out what needs to be done. We then see all the characters try to make the best of such a horrid situation, and deal with it in spite of the unfortunate timing.

With each of these stories, my attention was captured instantly, and looking back on the stories, now, I can say it was also done in a cleverly subtle way.

I received this book through NetGalley.



amysbrittain's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Loved these loosely interconnected stories of families, couples, and randomly crossed paths in and around Mobile, AL. Knight shapes fully realized characters and complex lives within each story. Just loved this.

rdebner's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A wonderful collection of short stories. There was something in the tone, or the characters, that reminded me a little bit of Ellen Gilchrist, but slightly darker.

kate_elizabeth's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

favorites: Cash and Grab, Our Lady of the Roses, Grand Old Party
(but they're all wonderful, really)

midnightbookgirl's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A wonderful collection of short stories! Knight captures the essence of Alabama and every day life and adds a little twist to each story that made me feel- wistful, nostalgic, sad, bittersweet- just to name a few emotions.

sargasso_c's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Eveningland was a book that embodied its title with enthusiasm. One gets a sense of being perpetually in the evening of the south, in the presence of resilient characters who are also fading. A novel in which the incomplete lends itself to a feeling of wholeness, a fitting tribute to Alabama and the south in general.

natchgreyes's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

A series of well-written short stories with a common thread set in the weeks/days/hours/minutes before Hurricane Katrina. The language used by Knight is absolutely beautiful. Haunting even, at times.

I really enjoyed that the stories were written from all kinds of perspectives - 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person - and focused on all manner of subjects. I think in all of them Knight really managed to capture the ambiance of the events and the feelings of the people involved.

It's hard to say more about a collection of short stories, except I really do want to emphasize that the prose is so wonderful that this is a book you should read just because of that alone, nevermind the engaging stories.

pallavi_sharma87's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A collection of short stories, so powerfully written made a significant impact on me as a reader. Seven different stories that take place at Knight's native Alabama showcases the relationships on different levels.
My favorites are
"Smash and Grab" where a robber is held by a teenage girl and leaves him surprised at every step. "Our lady of Roses" where an art teacher questions faith and life.
"The king of Dauphin Island", the 6th richest man in State of Alabama tries to buy an Island when he
suffers the loss of his wife.
Finally
"Landfall", where a family awaits hurricane but internally everyone in the family have their own hurricane to tackle.

This is my first book by Michael Knight, and I have added his other books to my TBR. Such a quiet book but kept me hooked till the end. I look forward to reading his other books soon.

Thank you for ARC from Netgalley and Grove Atlantic.

cewalker's review

Go to review page

5.0

Loved these stories. I feel like I need to have a glass of wine at The Grand asap.