What do you think?
Rate this book


272 pages, Paperback
First published October 13, 2020
"How does that affect the place we live when we allow a man like him to make a claim on the public office? How do we reconcile that to the country we've all grown up in? I talked to the sheriff about this. He told me something that maybe shouldn't have surprised me, but it did. He told me that there's not a hell of a lot of difference between the kind of community Noon wants and what a lot of people out here in Carter County would agree with. That's not the way I like to think about my home, but maybe it's not entirely untrue either. You don't see a lot of black families itching to move out here, do you? A scattering but that's all. Rebel flags no further than a quarter of a mile apart even though just about every family up here was pro-Union during the Civil War. But history doesn't have a damn thing to do with it anymore. Doesn't matter if your great-great-grandpa ambushed any butternut home guard he could, what matters is that even if your life has run down the backside of a toilet, at least you're a white man by God, and you're going to let the world know it.
"What happens then when a man like Noon can run for a position of government? It makes all of those racist jokes and hatred legitimate. It makes the whole ugly violent mess of who we are something to ignore and it makes it acceptable to do anything we please, because we are just protecting what makes up our genetic code."
come to my blog!Not simply the idea of a pure and isolated community as had been tried elsewhere, a commune that would be subject to its own vulnerable politics and struggles for power. No, the necessary difference would come when it was made part of an established government. They would have to entrench politically in a place that would be receptive to the idea of white nationhood. That was true revolution, when the revolution became invisible, when it became part of the routine. That was what would make the ultimate difference.