Member Reviews
I received a digital copy of this book for free through Netgalley. All options expressed are my own.
I so wanted to like this book. I tried time and time again to get into it, but it just wasn’t for me.
There are different “groups” of people and the book jumps around between them. Unfortunately it was a DNF for me. I got a little over half way through and the groups still seemed like they had nothing to do with each other. It was like reading 3 separate stories. Very confusing.
I’m giving it 3 stars because the writing itself was well done.
I know nothing of Sean Dietrich - or Sean of the South as I've gathered he's called - except for the fact that he wrote a lovely rambling story here with characters worthy of investing in. A great read peppered with humor and beauty as well as real life suckiness.
Thanks to Netgalley for the free read in exchange for an honest review.
Stars of Alabama - I was drawn to this book by the title (I lived most of my life in Alabama) and the author. I have read much of Mr. Dietrich's work. As his writing typically does, the descriptive language draws you in and then you become so attached to the characters that you can't choose a favorite. I wondered how on earth we would get all these people together. From country folk and faith healers, hound dogs and babies, grown men and strict southern women - this story has it all. I finished the book in front of a campfire while tent camping in Greer's Ferry, AR. It was the perfect setting for reading this book. I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
Sean Dietrich has hit a home run with Stars of Alabama. With characters as rich as warm pound cake and a storyline that grips the reader by the heartstrings, Stars of Alabama is Southern Gothic at its very finest.
Started out as a very promising book. Found myself bored in the last third. The conclusion was very contrived. I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
I love Sean Dietrich's blog posts. They are insightful, touching, and well worth reading, so I was excited to be able to preview this upcoming release. It's typical for his style of writing. While it is a full book, it reads a lot like his blog posts. It's written from the omniscient point of view, which works for this type of book. It holds with the realism one expects from Mr. Dietrich. Not everything wraps up into a happy ending. Not everyone gets a trophy. It's a little gritty in some areas, a little tear-jerking in some, and suspends belief in a couple of places, but that's all good. It works.
What a wonderful, magical read. It is the quintessential Southern novel and I know my patrons will waiting for it to arrive. As with so many wonderful titles, one can see themselves as little parts of all the characters. The way it stretches across time and place has a way of making us feel home at the same time. It is a beautiful read and I hope Sean will continue to explore his talents in the fiction genre.
Sean Dietrich is well known in the South as a gifted writer and story teller. Many folks follow his podcast, Sean of the South, read his daily blog online and snatch up one of his many books that share short pieces that touch the heart. I am one of those folks and like to think I am his biggest fan. when I found out he had a new novel hitting the shelves I pre-ordered and found a way to get an advanced reader copy so I could have a head start.
I was not disappointed one bit. Not one tiny bit. Mr. Dietrich's writing is memorable and his words soon become embedded into my soul and allow me to view the world with a little bit more hope than when I first started reading Stars of Alabama.
The story is set around 1932 and in the style that we have come to know and love from this author that is warm, folksy and descriptive. The phrases that stuck in my head long after the story is finished include several but my favorite is the phrase "Quit your sorryin'." The characters are real and down to earth and the salt of earth as they endure a difficult life in Kansas during the time of the Dust Bowl. Most of them find their way eventually to Alabama and thanks to some wonderful storytelling we find out how their lives are all intertwined.
I loved reading about the times and especially the evangelists and revivals that were front and center during this time. While the characters were many and varied they all shared one thing in common thanks to Mr. Dietrich. They were multi - dimensional and their personalities poured out of the pages of this wonderfully written novel.
I will long remember Marigold, Baby Ruth, Paul, Vern, Coot and the many others who popped off the pages. Naturally there were a couple of hound dogs (it is Sean Dietrich after all) who contributed to this tale of Southern living and I will never forget Louisville and Stringbean.
I absolutely loved this book and will be re-reading it when my copy arrives upon publication. It's that good. It is a story that is tough to read in some places but ultimately hope wins out and we are reminded that we are not alone in this big old world. There is something (Someone) much larger who is keeping an eye on things.
A very special thanks to NetGalley and Thomas Nelson- Fiction for an ARC. I was thrilled and honored to review an advance copy. This is my honest review.
Sean Dietrich is a columnist, podcaster, speaker, and novelist, known for his commentary on life in the American South. He has also written several volumes of short stories and several novels. All of them are “finger-lickin’ good.”
If you are in the mood for solid, compelling characters, which includes both people and dogs, mixed with positive values, then you will want to visit the Mobile, Alabama area with Sean Dietrich as your guide in this feel-good southern-living story.
You will never forget “Marigold the Magnificent”, Paul, Vern, Baby Ruth and other beautiful humans and then there’s the two bloodhounds- Louisville and Stringbean. These vivid folks, and several other memorable preachers, grifters, and hookers will captivate you with their southern world in the 1930’s.
We tend to think of the rural south before World War II as a simpler time and place. But life wasn’t simple or easy at all for our friends. The Dust Bowl storms were terrorizing the Plains, the Depression destroyed jobs and families who needed them. Church tent revivals were another phenomenon. Many times, our sturdy friends worked long back-breaking hours when they could even find a job. More often, they slept outside, and went hungry. But as one of them would say, “Quit your sorryin”.
Somehow, most of them make it to the promise land of Mobile Alabama, with its beautiful Gulf, and you will enjoy their journey. Written in a readable, folksy style similar to his blog posts, each characters’ heart and hopes shine forth. Life is tough, and unfair, but people are so sweet and strong. Here is a book to love!
Thanks to NetGalley and Thomas Nelson- Fiction for an ARC. This is my honest review.
A well written book that explores home and family and the complexities of both . I loved the characters and just felt overall that this is a soy book
Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for letting me review this book
This is the first book I've read by Sean Dietrich, but it won't be the last! I loved Mr. Dietrich’s writing style and the characters in this book. Told from the point of view of several different characters, you get to know each of them and their personal struggles. There’s Marigold, a young teen mom raising her baby in the forest because her family has rejected her. Coot, a child preacher, tired of living life on the road doing tent revivals and being physically and verbally abused by his father, the “famous” preacher E.P. Willard. Vern and Paul who are migrant workers, who happen upon a baby girl, crying and alone in the woods. When no one comes forward to claim her they take her on the road with them, figuring out how to care for her along the way.
As you’ll see in this story, sometimes the people you call your family may not necessarily be related to you. Family are the people that love you through thick and thin, are always there when you need them, and accept you just as you are…flaws and all. I highly recommend this book!!!
This book has it all, it is funny, sweet, sad. A cast of differing characters all intertwine. It is a story of hope and seeing the stars that we might not always look for
What a lovely, lovely read! How refreshing to read about people who, in the midst of struggling to overcome their own problems, are ever mindful of the needs of others. In spite of the setting in the dismal years of the Great Depression and the struggling economy in the following decade, this was a very uplifting and encouraging tale.
The story opens in about 1932 and focuses on 4 different groups of people in 4 different geographic areas of America. The author gives us an excellent bird’s eye view into the difficulties each area and each person were encountering. We had the horrific dust storms in the Midwest where adults and children were dying from dust induced pneumonia. We had the shysters out to make a buck any way they could. We had women in brothels because they were well fed and housed and well dressed there.
But all in all our characters are kind hearted and well meaning and very, very hard working. We encounter people generous to a fault, but not with money as few had any money. We encounter a lot of poverty and starvation, prevalent at the time – especially in the South. And we encounter the wiliness of people as they sought to preserve themselves or their loved ones.
And of course, the stories all dovetail bringing all these disparate parts together for a very satisfactory ending.
I am very thankful to NetGalley and the publisher, Thomas Nelson, for an ARC of this wonderful book and for the introduction to this [new-to-me] author. I will definitely seek out more books from Sean Dietrich.
I received a DIGITAL Advance Reader Copy of this book from #NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Stars of Alabama is a thoroughly enjoyable book by Sean Dietrich who does an excellent job of depicting 1930's Dust Bowl, tent revivals, and the south. You actually feel like you are in the midst. Dietrich shows that family is not necessarily the group of people you are born to, but sometimes is created by situations around you. Stars of Alabama would make a great book club read as well. Five Stars!! 👍
I've been reading "Sean of the South" online for a couple of years now and have enjoyed his writing style in those short pieces. I'm happy to say that his writing talent carries over into the novel format, as well. A good story about redemption and true family being that which you make yourself.