From Publishers Weekly:
By turns hilarious and melancholy, this is the epitome of a first novel: its flaws are balanced by an appealing promise. Philip Pearl is a young Jewish poet from New York who ends up, almost by accident, teaching in the English department of a small university in the heart of Mississippi. Kaplan mines rich material from this vein, starting with Pearl's initial encounter with a motel desk clerk who says nothing is available "poo-sod." ("Poo-sod?" "Yessir? By the poo?") Pearl finds himself wading into the intrigues of the department and various romantic tangles, all of it drenched in the mysterious and opaque quality of the Deep South as it seems to outsiders. The book's plotting is somewhat confusedthe story builds and then collapses without sufficient explanation. But then, little that Pearl encounters can be quite explained. Kaplan's writing is crisp, authentic and brimming with originality and wit. Despite occasional lapses (the image of cars pulling out into traffic "like a parade float" appears twice, for instance) this novel heralds a bright new voice.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
When New Yorker Philip Pearl accepts a teaching post as assistant professor of English at Pickett State University in Mississippi--his small book of poems, Oedipus at Secaucus , secures him the job--he is unprepared for the cultural shock of life in the New South. Adjusting to the fish camps and honkytonks proves relatively easy, but when Pearl becomes romantically attached to two local girls, one of whom has a shotgun-packing boyfriend, he begins to long for the "security" of New York. Pearl's classes are tranquil compared with life outside college but, taken together, they comprise a truly Southern education for him. There is much to admire in this first novel--likable characters, a gently satirical portrait of academia, a flair for local color--but the effect is diffused by a scattershot plot and too much reliance on cornpone humor and Southern dialect.
- Laurence Hull, Cannon Memorial Lib., Concord, N.C.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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