![]() I Can't Think of Any Other Book Out There Quite Like It. "To Open Nathan Harris's First Novel Is to Enter a Trance. ![]() Harris' First Novel Is an Aching Chronicle of Loss, Cruelty, and Love in the Wake of Community Devastation" ![]() "Harris' Lucid Prose and Vivid Characterization Illustrate a Community at War With Itself, Poisoned by Pride and Mired in Racial and Sexual Bigotry. One of the finest audiobook performances I have ever heard: I highly recommend spending time listening to the voices of these characters as performed in this work of audio art. But This Sanctuary Survives on a Knife's Edge, and It Isn't Long Before the Inhabitants of the Nearby Town of Old Ox React With Fury at the Alliances Being Formed Only a Few Miles Away. The gritty world of Nathan Harris’s The Sweetness of Water is beautifully brought to life by William DeMeritt’s narration. When the Brothers Begin to Live and Work on George's Farm, the Tentative Bonds of Trust and Union Begin to Blossom Between the Strangers. Forced to Hide Out in the Woods Near Their Former Georgia Plantation, They're Soon Discovered by the Land's Owner, George Walker, a Man Still Reeling From the Loss of His Son in the War. In the Dying Days of the American Civil War, Newly Freed Brothers Landry and Prentiss Find Themselves Cast Into the World Without a Penny to Their Names. ![]() For Readers of Washington Black, the Underground Railroad and Days Without End. ![]()
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