Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

A Land More Kind Than Home

Rate this book
In his phenomenal debut novel—a mesmerizing literary thriller about the bond between two brothers and the evil they face in a small North Carolina town—author Wiley Cash displays a remarkable talent for lyrical, powerfully emotional storytelling. A Land More Kind than Home is a modern masterwork of Southern fiction, reminiscent of the writings of John Hart ( Down River ), Tom Franklin ( Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter ), Ron Rash ( Serena ), and Pete Dexter ( Paris Trout )—one that is likely to be held in the same enduring esteem as such American classics as To Kill a Mockingbird , Of Mice and Men , and A Separate Peace . A brilliant evocation of a place, a heart-rending family story, a gripping and suspenseful mystery—with A Land More Kind than Home , a major American novelist enthusiastically announces his arrival.

309 pages, Paperback

First published April 17, 2012

Loading interface...
Loading interface...

About the author

Wiley Cash

13 books1,555 followers
Wiley Cash is theNew York Times best selling author of The Last Ballad, A Land More Kind than Home, and This Dark Road to Mercy (William Morrow/HarperCollins). He currently serves as the writer-in-residence at the University of North Carolina-Asheville and teaches in the Mountainview Low-Residency MFA. He lives in North Carolina with his wife and their two young daughters. Please visit wileycash.com to check the scheduled events for his book tour in the fall of 2017.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
7,099 (25%)
4 stars
12,352 (44%)
3 stars
6,760 (24%)
2 stars
1,279 (4%)
1 star
407 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 3,746 reviews
Profile Image for Jaline.
444 reviews1,801 followers
March 30, 2019
By the end of this incredibly shocking and moving novel, words had left me. This is one of those rare times where I had to sleep on a story before I could write my review; to recover myself with a solid return to my own life from the one I had been living while reading this book.

This story is told by three narrators, and as each takes over from the last, alternating throughout the chapters, the plot advances and we come to know all the people involved in this story:

Adelaide Lyle: a woman in her early 80’s who has lived in Madison County, North Carolina almost her entire life. She is a sage, a healer, a peace-maker; someone who others turn to when they are in trouble – and sometimes when they want to make trouble or disguise trouble.

Jess Hall: a 9 year old boy with a 13 year old brother who is mute. Although younger, Jess feels responsible for helping Christopher (nickname ‘Stump’) navigate a world that fears his handicap, a world that judges his difference as something to be ‘fixed’.

Clem Barefield: in his 60’s now, he has been the Sherriff in Marshall for decades. The death of his son twenty years ago has ties to the Hall family. Although there have been strange events associated with the church near Marshall that is run by Pastor Carson Chambliss over the past decade or so, Sherriff Clem has not interfered.

Clem muses, ”People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it’s a drug, and they don’t want to give it up once they’ve got hold of it.” To be clear, the religion spoken about here is not the same as in most of the religious world. Clem uses the word fanaticism, and he uses it accurately. It is the kind of religion where a charismatic and forceful leader takes words from the Bible intended to be inspiring and turns them around so far that only their dark side can be seen. And implemented.

This novel has circles within circles and a spiral that gives us different views from every turn. Different as people are different, yet held together by the time (mid-1980’s) and place. The push of crumbling relationships, contested belief systems, isolation, and struggle is told with such pure, edgy simplicity, yet it has an impetus and power that rivals a cataclysmic disaster.

This novel left me breathless and with a deep well of sadness inside. It also left me with hope and the feeling that ultimately, people can and will change. Hope, and the assurance that although change sometimes requires a huge cost, common sense and shared humanity rise to conquer people’s dark, misguided selves. Eventually.
Profile Image for karen.
4,006 reviews172k followers
September 3, 2018
You show me a woman who calls herself a Christian up in these parts, and I'll show you a woman who knows how to heal. It ain't un-Christian to make do when you're poor, I can promise you that. You just show me a Christian woman up here, and I'll show you a woman who knows what to pick and where to find it. If you don't know how to heal yourself, then you don't know how to live when times are hard.

ahhhh, another "salt of the earth," "take care of your own business" kind of book.

and another great one, at that.

this definitely reminds me of that tom franklin brand of crime fiction, but this one is somehow even more grim than Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter.

in the best way, of course.

here we have a story of a preacher come to a small town in north carolina with a past full of sins and a hankering to form his own little cult of snake-handlers and affliction-healers; covering up the church windows with newspaper and ostensibly leading his congregation on the path to glory, speaking in tongues and laying on of hands.

except, sometimes, behind those newspaper-covered windows, people will die.

including a teenaged boy; mute and somewhere on the autism spectrum, who has seen something he just shouldn't have seen, and will be healed so hard he will end up dead.

the story is told through the narration of three characters; the brother of the deceased boy, the sheriff of madison county, and the elderly adelaide lyle, who knows what the preacher is, but is powerless against him. she has managed one small victory in taking the children out of the church and schooling them herself every week, but that is a small victory, and cold comfort when christopher/"stump" dies in that very church.

the most powerful element of this story is the transformation of the family after stump dies, particularly stump and jess' father's transformation. this is deep, heartbreaking stuff here.

it is a story of powerlessness, and the way that we rarely have the opportunity to do the right thing - because of lack of knowledge, or courage, or proof. it is about small-town clannishness,and old grudges, and the difficulties of seeing the big picture in the midst of a crisis.

eventually, it is about healing. but the healing comes at a great price, and leaves a permanent hurt.

definitely worth reading. and if penguin UK weren't so stingy, i would be reading his new one through netgalley right now.

dammit.

come to my blog!
Profile Image for Annet.
570 reviews887 followers
October 6, 2019
Beautifully written book, debut of this writer, a real recommendation from my part. Yes, the book is a slow read, not really pacy story, but that did not bother me at all, all the more does the beauty of the story, the atmosphere and the writing come through. I loved the change of narrator and story line per chapter. And you really feel the tension and atmosphere drifting from the pages.
A Land More Kind than Home tells the story of the bond between two young brothers and the evil they face in a small North Carolina town. The novel is narrated by three characters, nine year old Jess, the youngest of the two boys and the lone witness to the tragedy that befalls his autistic brother Stump under an adult's hand; Adelaide Lyle, the church matriarch and moral conscience whose suspicion of a preacher drives her from the congregation; and Clem Barefield, a local sheriff with his own tragic past, who struggles to untangle the roots of the tragedy in a community that has been intimidated into silence..."They said he could perform miracles, heal the sick - like my brother Stump. After it happened, they said that sometimes miracles go wrong. They say it was God's will, and that's all there is to it. But I know what I saw... and it wasn't a miracle...
I hope this author publishes a new book soon!
Profile Image for Julie .
4,168 reviews38.2k followers
March 27, 2020
A Land More Kind than Home by Wiley Cash is a 2012 William Morrow publication.

Deeply affecting and very impressive debut novel-

Death is to lose the earth you know, for greater knowing; to lose the life you have, for a greater life; to leave the friends you loved, for greater loving; to find a land more kind than home, more large than earth-Thomas Wolfe-

This book fits into both of my 2020 reading challenges, which is to read authors I haven’t tried yet and reading books everyone has read but me. I had a feeling I was going to like the book and the author, but both exceeded my expectations!!

Told from the triple narratives of nine -year old Jess Hall, Adelaide Lyle, a midwife, and the small North Carolina town Sheriff, Clem Barefield, the story chronicles the rise of Carson Chambliss, pastor of River Road Church of Christ and the hold he has over the community.

The church, zeroing in a specific Bible passage, twists it into a circus of snake handling, speaking in tongues, and the drinking of poison. After Adelaide sees a woman die during one of the 'worhip' services, she dares to challenge the pastor, and steps up to protect the county’s children from him, and the strange goings on at the church.

Jess looks over his brother, Christopher, nicknamed ‘Stump’, who is mute and autistic. But the boys have a habit of snooping, and eventually they see something they shouldn’t have. Their mother, Julie, hoping Stump can be healed, allows the pastor to ‘help’ him. The results of Julie’s faith and desperation will prompt Sheriff Barefield to start poking around in the life of the enigmatic Carson Chambliss. This string of events will erupt into a tragic but fateful turn of events…

I was sitting on the edge of my seat, watching as the clouds build into a powerful storm, knowing there will casualties, but unable to tear myself away. The writing is exemplary, the atmosphere thick with dread, and the characters vivid and vibrant. Southern Fiction is always compelling, but it takes a special talent to capture the right tone. Cash employs a stark, literary prose which is quite effective. Occasionally, it was a bit too polished for this premise, but that's a minor flaw.

Clem is so quiet and introspective and his pain is haunting and palpable. Yet, it wasn’t until the bitter end that I began to feel a deeper respect for him.Jess was the conduit by which the events that transpire are connected. His character is one that inspires sympathy, but of the three narratives, his trials are yet to come, which doesn't allow him much room to develop emotionally. ( I would like to hear from him again, someday, though) It was Addie's courage and morality that made the biggest impression on me.

It’s a good thing to see that people can heal after they’ve been broken, they can change and become something different from what they were before.

The irony is thick as the story winds around, coming full circle. Fate and redemption are the most pronounced themes, but love, and true faith are also very strong messages that shone through the murky mess, bringing the promise of better days ahead.

A brilliant debut! So glad I finally got around to reading this one!

4 stars
Profile Image for Will Byrnes.
1,339 reviews121k followers
August 30, 2019
The title of the book is taken from Thomas Wolfe's You Can’t Go Home Again, referring to death as how we “find a land more kind than home, more large than earth,” so you have to expect some unpleasantness before we come to the end.

description
Wiley Cash - image from his FB profile

Evil arrives in garish togs. Carson Chambliss is a reverend of suspect provenance. He comes to town, takes over an unused church, papers over the windows and mesmerizes his congregation with some very old-time religion. He seems particularly taken with snakes, handling them, using them as a test of faith, and finding some other uses besides. He is a big believer in faith healing. A considerable scar has marred his hand and who know how far up the damage goes? No shades of gray here, CC is a baddie. He brings not only his somewhat charred history and odd passions, but real danger to some of the inhabitants of Madison, North Carolina, a sleepy tobacco-growing town.

The story is told through the eyes of three narrators, Sheriff Clem Barefield, Adelaide Lysle and young Jess Hall. Jess is an ordinary kid, curious, energetic, but with a bit more on his shoulders than other ten or eleven year olds. His older brother Christopher, who everyone calls Stump, was born mute, autistic most likely, and Jess looks out for him. Stump and Jess do a bit of spying and see something they shouldn’t, setting in motion a wildfire of deceit, violence and revenge that affects much of the town.

Sheriff Barefield, charged with trying to keep the peace in town, has some personal history that still haunts him and affects how he goes about his business.

Addie Lysle heroically acts as a guardian angel, trying to keep Chambliss from harming the town’s children. She tells of her battles with evil, but how much protection can one woman provide?

Is this a tale of good versus evil? CC is definitely evil, no question. And Adelaide Lysle stands strongly for good, but there are diverse forces lined up against CC and most of them have chinks in their moral armor. Jess withholds critical information. Jess’ father, Ben, has issues with anger and another kind of withholding. The sheriff allows his anger at old events get the better of him. The only real innocent here is Stump, but he is not really involved in the battle. Maybe this is more a case of human versus evil.

Can you ever go home again? I guess it depends on why you left and what remains there that might still retain a hold. Is location destiny? We are told of one man who burned his own home because he thought the devil lived there. No going home again for him. Maybe a home being on particularly high ground made its residents susceptible to tragedy living in a lowland, or in-town house would have avoided. Might it be that a childhood home rich in religion can make one feel that church is a home?

This is an impressive first novel. Cash has crafted engaging characters, a story that will keep you burning through the pages, and enough content to make the journey worth your time. Hopefully your home is a kind enough place in which to read this and you do not have to go looking for something kinder.


PS
Here is a piece by the author that is worth reading.
Profile Image for Angela M is taking a break..
1,360 reviews2,150 followers
January 11, 2015


I am surprised how quickly I was drawn into this book . I didn't want to read it at first because I thought it might be a bit too dark for me and I wasn't sure if I really wanted to read a story about religious fanaticism . I'm glad I did read it in spite of the fact that this book was gut wrenching and tragic and dark and it made me just about hold my breath waiting for the inevitable to happen.

I know it may sound odd to say that this is a "readable" book but it really is . From the first word there is no going back , only forward - it is so gripping. There are multiple story tellers . Jess Hall's focus is on the present lending us a 9 year old's view of this world in a small town in North Carolina defined by tobacco farming and religion. I was heartbroken for what he endures and was moved to tears as he tells about his relationship with his mute brother Stump and how he has to deal with things that he just can't understand. Through Adelaide Lyle , who has delivered many of the children and their parents and Clem Barefield , the sheriff, who carries his own personal loss and sorrow , we come to know about the pasts of Ben and Julia Hall, Jess and Stump's parents and Carson Chambliss, the minister who is the personification of evil .

It's eerie and dark and sad , yet beautifully written. While there is a feeling of hope and redemption in the end - I couldn't help but ask - at what cost ? I can't imagine that I will forget about this book any time soon . I was left with the thought that Wiley Cash was born to write.
Profile Image for Florence (Lefty) MacIntosh.
167 reviews539 followers
July 14, 2014
A sinister thriller with all the elements you look for in southern gothic. Good versus evil, a tragic morality tale spiced with carnal sin and deceit, its focus the terrible cost to a community when blind faith and religious fervor is taken to the cult level. You’ve got the perfect villain in Carson Chambliss, a crooked snake lovin pastor, nastier than the rattlers he uses to test the devotion of his flock. Caught in his cross-hairs is poor ‘Stump’ Hall, a young mute boy who's only line of defense is a 10 yr. old - his kid brother Jess and a 70 yr. old named Adelaide Lyle. She’s perfection as the "came off the mountain" town mid-wife, gutsy "I drove back from that meeting with Chambliss as scared as I’d ever been in my entire life" , simple but sharp enough to see right through Chambliss and hell-bent on protecting the children from him. Good thing because Stump’s mother is nothing but a holy fool and his father while a good man, oblivious to the danger threatening his family. Throw in a mean drunk for a granddaddy and a town sheriff with his own demons to contend with... Seriously, what more could you ask for!

Wiley Cash’s debut and it read’s like it was written by a pro. A southern boy raised in an evangelical church, he’s got the dialect, setting and characters down pat. "You could tell that autumn was bearing down on us because the leaves on the trees atop the ridge were just starting to get notions of color." His tension building is slow & relentless, pulled me into that backwoods little North Carolina town & held on right through to its inevitably tragic conclusion. 4 ½ stars

Cons: Switching perspectives between 3 narrators (old Adelaide, sheriff Barefield & young Jess) Jess’s was the weakest, the pacing suffered for it. In fairness 10 yr. olds can only hold my attention for so long. The telling by Adelaide & Sheriff Barefield more than made up for it. And no getting around it - the ending is overblown but hey, it felt appropriate and oddly satisfying.
________________________________________
Mark 16:17–18. “And these signs will follow those who believe: In my name they will cast out demons, they will speak in new tongues; they will pick up snakes with their hands; and when they drink deadly poison, it will not hurt them; they will place their hands on the sick, and they will get well.”

March 27, 2020
4.5 stars rounded up

A Land More Kind Than Home is a daring, haunting, and heartfelt story of courage and the bond between two brothers. I could feel the evil slithering in this story that left me feeling a little uncomfortable. The love and bond between Jess Hall and his brother warmed my heart but my guard was up for the evil hiding behind the face of what should be good and safe.

Wiley Cash creates the strongest narrators here for me with these complicated and troubled characters, allowing me to become completely engrossed in their stories. I loved the intensity, grit, and suspense to this one and Cash does a great job of showing me what his character’s words wanted me to see. It left me with no questions as to who to trust with this one, just the intense suspense to see how it all comes together in the end. I highly recommend!

For all my reviews featuring Wiley Cash please check out our Travelling Sister Blog
https://travelingsistersbookreviews.c...
Profile Image for Lawyer.
384 reviews933 followers
July 28, 2013
A Land More Kind Than Home: The Debut Novel of Wiley Cash

Photobucket
Wiley Cash

Wiley Cash takes his title from the final lines of You Can't Go Home Again by Thomas Wolfe. The epigraph Cash chose sets the tone of the work that follows.

Something has spoken to me in the night...and told me I shall die. I know not where. Saying:

"[Death is] to lose the earth yo know, for greater knowing; to lose the life you have, for greater life; to leave the friends you loved, for greater loving; to find a land more kind than home, more large than earth."


Cash skilfully spins his tale through three distinct points of view: Adelaide Lyle, an elderly lady who provides the history and background of the story, serving as moral conscience of the story; nine year old Jess Hall, the portrait of innocence lost; and Clem Barefield, sheriff of Madison County, North Carolina for twenty-five years. First taking office in 1961, Barefield sets the events in the story in 1986.

Madison County is as far west in North Carolina as you can get, butting against the border of Tennessee. Marshall is the County seat. A patchwork of deep wooded valleys and steep mountains, tobacco farmers in the western region of the state produce burley tobacco on farms hewed out of land more reminiscent of a network of roller coasters than agriculture.

Photobucket
Marshall, NC, County Seat of Madison County

Folks in the Appalachians are God fearing. Passing through, if the Spirit moves you, you won't have a problem finding a church. But I'd recommend steering clear of churches in old grocery stores and gas stations, especially if the name of the church ends in the words "in Signs Following." Folks put their faith on exhibition by handling serpents, drinking strychnine, and handling fire to see if it'll burn'em.

Photobucket
Inside a Church of Christ With Signs Following

Adelaide Lyle

Now, you take the church in this book. It didn't start out that way. Once upon a time it was the French Broad Church of Christ in a real cburch with pews and a steeple, headed up by Pastor Matthews. But the cancer got him back in 75. Then along comes this fellow from out of nowhere, name of Carson Chambliss.

It didn't take long for about half the congregation to up and leave when Chambliss took over pastoring. Without half the congregation, the bank took the church and sold it to the Presbyterians. That was fine with Chambliss who moved the church down to the old grocery store and papered the windows so nobody passing by could see what was going on inside that building.

Chambliss put up a sign by the road at the edge of the parking lot and changed the name to River Road Church of Christ in Signs Following. Now, you remember what I told you about those churches ending their name in Signs Following. Underneath the name of the church he painted Mark 16: 17-18. That's those verses that say you got faith you can pick up serpents, drink poison, and the Holy Ghost will keep you safe.

"I'd seen people I'd known just about my whole life pick up snakes and drink poison, hold fire up to their faces just to see if it would burn them. Holy people, too...that hadn't ever acted like that a day in their lives. But Chambliss convinced them it was safe to challenge the will of God."


Jess Hall

I'm nine and my brother is eleven. His name is Christopher but everybody calls him Stump. He's never said a word. He's bigger than me but I'm the leader. We live with Mama and Daddy. Daddy grows tobacco. When he hangs it in the barn and it dries out it smells so good.

Stump and I get in trouble with Mama when we snoop. There's things we shouldn't know about. One day Stump and me were outside and heard the noises Mama and Daddy make sometimes when we're told to go outside and play. Stump climbed up on the rain barrel but it wasn't Daddy in there making those noises. I saw Mama's preacher leave the house and he looked at me and Stump. I didn't tell Daddy about the noises.

On Sunday Mama went down to the church like she always does. Daddy doesn't go. Instead of leaving us at Sunday School with Miss Adelaide, Mama took Stump with her. I wanted to go, but she wouldn't let me. Only Stump. She took him to night church, too. I don't know what happened. But Stump died. Daddy got so mad at the men from church that brought Stump home he hit them and hit them.

Clem Barefield

Twenty five years next month. That's how long I've been Sheriff here in Madison County. My grandfather was Sheriff over in Henderson County. And my father farmed apples there. Hendersonville, Flat Rock, they're little more than an hour away, but living here is as close to living in a different world as you can get, no matter how old you get.

People here are different. They're superstitious. Know the old mountain ways. Religion is so thick in the hills and hollers up here you can stir it with a stick. But I haven't had a reason to set foot inside a church in more years than I can count, especially after my son Jeff died. It's not natural for a man to outlive his son. Jeff and Ben Hall were friends, good friends. Ben settled down, married, became a good farmer, a good provider.

There's calls you get that don't amount to nothin'. Then there's those you get you can't forget. My wife Sheila handed me the phone and it was Robby, my Deputy, telling me Ben Hall's boy Stump was laying dead up at Adelaide Lyle's house. Killed in that damned church over on River Road.

Sheila told me not to let things get out of hand. There's some times though you can't keep from gettin' out of hand. Specially when that damned crazy preacher Chambliss is at the bottom of things. How the Hell does a boy get killed in a church? Why in the Hell do you kill a child who is incapable of speaking a word?

The Reviewer

Wiley Cash can write. He can tell a story. Cash began A Land Before Time while a graduate student in Louisiana. His mentor, as he worked on his dissertation, was Ernest Gaines. What an opportunity!

Photobucket
Ernest Gaines--I love me some Ernest Gaines' Books

Everyone seems to love this book. Cash is one of the new darlings of the publishing world. His interview with Vanity Fair is entitled "Author Wiley Cash on Being the “Justin Timberlake of American Literature." http://www.vanityfair.com/online/dail...

The dust jacket gleams with blurbs to the point you'd think this book came wrapped in stars. Clyde Edgerton said it would knock your socks off. Gail Godwin said it was like stepping into a Greek tragedy. Ernest Gaines' blurb is a little bit more interesting. Although it begins with a glow it dims to a weak glimmer. "I think this could be the beginning of a long fruitful career."

In an interview with Brad Wetherell in Fiction Writers Review Cash said he got the basic idea of his plot from a newspaper clipping about a young autistic boy being smothered during a healing ceremony in a store front church in Chicago. Cash wanted to move it South to North Carolina. http://fictionwritersreview.com/inter...

I wish I could love this book as many reviewers and readers seem to. However, as well as Cash can cause the reader to keep turning the pages, he leaves some mighty big gaps in his story.

How was Chambliss chosen as the new minister at the ill-fated church? How did Chambliss manage to convert a Church of Christ into an unquestioning foot stompin', snake handlin' strychnine drinkin' fire handlin' bunch with such ease?

Sure, this is a work of fiction. But even writers of fiction might do a little research about an area in which so much documentation exists, such as the Holiness Church movement. Bottom line, there are few converts to serpent handling. These churches, found up through Appalachia, consist of small congregations which include descendants of the original founding members. They don't grow into practicing churches overnight. Cash should read Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia by Dennis Covington.

Cash is being touted as the next Tom Franklin. Sorry. Franklin never left so many gaps in a story. I think Ernest Gaines is right. This book could be the beginning of a fruitful career. Or it could turn into a series of incredulous stories. The choice is Cash's.

I wouldn't discourage anyone from reading this book. I rate it a 4 for the prose, a 3 for the plot with an over-all 3.5. Hallelujah!

UPDATE: Chosen as a group read by members of On the Southern Literary Trail for August, 2013. http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/6...
Profile Image for Margitte.
1,188 reviews617 followers
February 7, 2017
“and I can tell you God makes us how he needs us to be.”
― Wiley Cash, A Land More Kind Than Home

What was there to do for Clem Barefield, the sheriff for twenty-five years of Marshville, in Madison County, with pastor Carson Chambliss, who ran his church like he was Jesus Christ himself, had a following that would believe in his message to their deaths, and a church with windows covered in newspapers, and his idea of religion that was like a drug to these souls."People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it's a drug, and they don't want to give it up once they're on it they're likely to do anything these little backwoods churches tell them to do." - like drinking poison, handling snakes and fire.
Clem Barefield: "Well, I got a dead boy who never said a word in his life, a mama who don’t want to say one now, a preacher who’s more interested in saving my soul than telling me the truth, and an old woman who’s too scared of him to say hardly anything at all. I know it sounds like I got a lot, but when you take a hard look at it it don’t amount to much more than jack shit, if it even amounts to that.”
Adelaide Lyle, the fiery old matriarch of the church, the midwife who brought most of the members into the world, the spiritual conscience of the town, had the history of the church and town to share, when a little boy dies during a church service. She was country; she was tough; she was sweet, and nurturing.

Nine-year-old Jess Hall, second son of Ben and Julie Hall, was the keeper of his older brother Stump, the mute friend and soulmate, in a time when silence was more important to his dad, and the church the voice of reason for his mother. Jess and Stump explored the mysteries of the world, but discovered one mystery too many that left young Jess with a guilty secret.

Sheriff Clem Barefield, the outsider, the rational voice of the law, had to defy the laws of God and the self-anointed presenter on earth, Carson Chambliss, to get to the facts. For in religion and stories, there is always a deeper truth disguised behind the lies. The problem was how to determine what was lies and what was truth. And what to do when his own road of life crossed intimately with some members of the community.

MY COMMENTS
A literary thriller; southern-noir; southern gothic; grit litt. In the rhythmic dialect of the Souths (because the dialects differ from region to region, resulting in more than one south) a tale of hope of deliverance and salvation, and the power of forgiveness enfolds in the mountains of North Carolina.

I was so immediately invested in this story, making it my own, since it reminded me of one of the most profound books I have ever read in this genre:

The Night of the Hunter by Davis Grubb.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Both books not only knocked my socks off, it also ripped my heart out.

THE ELEMENTS IN THE BOOK
There are three protagonists who represent a true portrayal of the community. They provide a well rounded, multi-perspective-angle to this story:
1) the emotional element through Jess, the young innocent boy;
2) the spiritual balance through Adelaide Lyle;
3) and the voice of reason through sheriff Clem Barefield.

Through their eyes, introducing the history, customs and complexity of all the characters, a tale of love and sorrow is told with a fine balance between the lighter and darker components in the book. More dark than light.

A Land More Kind Than Home is an atmospheric lyrical and literary thriller which deserves all the accolades it received as a bestseller.

MY REACTIONS:
I made war with Julie; I wanted to confront the author- man! how I wanted to drive Wiley Cash off the dang bridge! I was shocked and sad; emotionally spent; but in the end I was so grateful for the author's brilliant storytelling and mastery with words.

What an unbelievable journey this book has been. How can I ever forget it! Like The Night of the Hunter this book lands up on my All-Time Favorite shelf.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!

PS. A 1967 documentary called The Holy Ghost People about the religious handling of snakes and drinking poison in some American churches, can be viewed here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlUDY...

Profile Image for Dem.
1,228 reviews1,335 followers
January 28, 2020
A Land More Kind Than Home by Wiley Cash is a heartbreaking and beautifully written story about religion, family and a community who fail to protect a child.

I must admit the first thing that drew me to this book was its cover, it is beautiful and I am a sucker for a pretty picture.
But this book is far from just a pretty cover picture, it’s the story of Jess Hall who watches in horror as his autistic brother is smothered during a healing service in the mountains of North Carolina.

This novel is beautifully written and at 306 pages hardback version you know it’s not going to take long to read. The narrative is told in four voices: Jess a ten year old boy , his father, the Town sheriff and Adelaide an old woman who was the first to realise the evil of the church.

This is the sort of descriptive writing that is colourful and draws you right into a small town if North Carolina and you can visualise the wonderful characters, you can even smell the smells of North Carolina and the Author really does a good job on this Novel

I think if you liked The Homecoming of Samuel Lake you will love this book.
Profile Image for Zoeytron.
1,036 reviews852 followers
June 20, 2016
What the mute boy sees is unspeakable; what goes on behind the covered windows in that church is unforgivable.

How many times have we been told that life isn't fair? 'I've learned to just go ahead and take fairness out of the equation. If you do, things stand the chance of making a whole lot more sense.' Wise words from Sheriff Clem Barefield, Madison County, North Carolina.

Addie Lyle, 81 years old and is as sharp as a tack. She sees right through the viperous Carson Chambliss, preacher of the local church. His stock in trade includes the handling of poisonous snakes and faith healing, lording it over anyone who is not a "true believer".

The relationship between young brothers Jess and Stump seemed spot on. My heart went out to the both of them. I thoroughly enjoyed this story and the characters. A very fine debut novel.
Profile Image for Lyn.
1,934 reviews17.1k followers
March 30, 2019
To the list of great southern writers, we will need to add the name Wiley Cash.

Cash’s 2012 novel A Land More Kind Than Home weaves together many ubiquitous themes of Southern Literature into a page turning, masterfully crafted story of family, loss and redemption.

I’ve always thought that the best of Southern writing uses the same themes common to country and western music and what better place to catalogue such themes than Steve Goodman’s song as sung by David Allen Coe –“You Never Even Call Me By My Name”. As Coe lists, and Goodman amends in his classic final verse, such a perfect work must include “mama, trains, trucks, prison, and getting' drunk”. There may have been a very passing reference to trains, but other than that, Cash nailed it. (and of course, what a great southern artist name – Cash?) Add to this list other themes representative of southern literature like conflicted theology, violence, grotesque, estrangement, poverty and agriculture and Cash has produced a Blue Ribbon work. (BTW - ask anyone who has actually done it and you'll learn that tobacco farming is some of the hardest work to do).

Describing events leading up to a tragedy in a small town near Asheville, North Carolina, Cash has succinctly and thoughtfully delivered an emotional yet universally understood tale of loss and betrayal. Told from a shifting first person perspective between three very likable characters, Cash weaves his story to encompass and embrace a myriad of memorable players and scenes.

Most noteworthy is Cash’s dialogue and style. I see that Mr. Cash hails from North Carolina and so he gets it honest (and I’ve spent most of my life in Middle Tennessee so I’ve heard and read my share). A true southern accent is resonant with a lyric quality and has a natural cadence that, when done correctly, can be interpreted in prose and poetry. The most common mistake I hear or read when a non-southerner tries to replicate our speech is to simply overdo it. Cash’s dialogue flows naturally and purely as a clear Appalachian mountain stream. And of course, what southern writing would be complete without entertaining similes, homey colloquialisms and folksy homilies? Cash again does it right, providing a quality of realism and grace without too much, which tends towards caricature and inelegance.

A Southern Gothic tale told with skill, with wonderfully descriptive and colorful language, Cash is also craftsman enough to include elements of humor and throughout displays a vibrancy that will bring me back for more of his writing. Highly recommended.

description
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,898 reviews14.4k followers
May 1, 2012
My goodness but this book was fantastic! His use of local color and dialect, his descriptions, his use of the weather to ratchet up the tension, and all this from a first time author. The town midwife, Adelaide, who sees it as her job to protect the children, the sheriff, who has plenty of tragedy in his own life, and the two young boys, Jess, who is in third grade, and his older but mute brother, Christopher. When evil comes to their small Appalachian town in the form of itinerant preacher, Chambliss, events are set in motion that will leave few unscathed. Two boys would pay for their natural curiosity in a way that is out of all proportion to their misdeed. I knew this story drew me in when I found myself wanting to grab one of the characters and tell them not to do it. I felt the tension in the pit of my stomach, like the way one feels before the big drop on a roller coaster. Yet in ends in a note of hope and a looking forward to that I would not have thought possible. Absolutely gripping!
Profile Image for Paula K .
440 reviews412 followers
Read
July 1, 2018
I just can’t read a book about a preacher that is a snake charmer. Way too much for me. So I’m not giving this book a rating. Tried to get back to it twice, but couldn’t make it through.

Update:
This author is very well liked by Goodreads friends. I do have his The Last Ballad to read that I got on a Kindle deal. I do want to give this author another chance.

I am a definite fan of Southern lit (Franklin, Hart, Joy, and Smith).
Profile Image for Jennifer Masterson.
200 reviews1,348 followers
September 14, 2015
Jess Hall broke my heart into ten million tiny little pieces!

"A Land More Kind Than Home" is a beautifully written novel by Wiley Cash. It is unbelievably good, especially for a debut. This story had me hooked right away and never let go. I have a feeling little Jess will stay with me for a long time.

Set in a small Southern town it's a dark story about the power and corruption that religion can cause. Carson Chambliss is an evil preacher who comes to this town and boy is he a disgusting, vile piece of scum. I don't want to give too much away. What I will say is Cash uses three different narrators to tell the story which centers around a death. The three narrators bring to light secrets from the past in this small town in North Carolina. The story was told so vividly that I felt like I was actually there! I couldn't read the last 100 pages fast enough!

Highly recommend!


Profile Image for Tooter.
504 reviews262 followers
February 7, 2017
So sad and touching but wonderfully written.
Profile Image for Shelby *trains flying monkeys*.
1,705 reviews6,418 followers
March 12, 2014
You know that feeling of a chill going up your spine when you are reading a really good book? That's what this story was to me.
Now don't get me wrong..this book is dark fiction. Not all fairy tales and happy endings.

This story is told from three points of view but it's not confusing when the view points switch. The one that tore my heart out was 8 year old Jess. The other two viewpoints are from the sheriff who has suffered his share of loss and an elderly woman who has seen bad in men before.

You've got a church that keeps yellowed paper over the windows so that people can't see in from the outside. Snake handling, poison drinking and hard healing is what's going on inside that place. This bad guy was truly scary. It's easy to see that someone like him would have followers. His story is just pure evil. Can I just punch him for the hell of it?

Then I noticed at the end of the book that this is author Wiley Cash's first book?! What the heck! This writing flows like smooth sweet chocolate. You see everything he is writing and feel all the emotions of his characters.

Profile Image for ❀Julie.
98 reviews87 followers
August 26, 2015
This was an absolutely gripping novel that drew me in instantly with its simple yet addictive writing style. I loved the southern setting, the unforgettable characters, the intricate details, and vivid imagery that made me feel like I was right there. It was a mesmerizing story, quietly told in three distinct voices, but was not for the faint of heart. There were times it was difficult to read and I found myself holding my breath at its intensity, but also there were some beautiful passages on hope and healing. My heart completely broke for the character Jess, and all that he endured at such a young age. As secrets in this small town were revealed and the story evolved it became haunting, and I could not turn the pages fast enough. I appreciated this story even more after reading the author’s notes at the back of the book on what inspired him to write this story and how he derived its title. I had never heard of this author until seeing a goodreads friend post it recently with a high rating, but I am so glad I read it and I look forward to reading more from this author.
Profile Image for Perry.
632 reviews613 followers
September 19, 2016
Snakes on Montane



Right after reading this in June 2012, I wrote a long review, which I apparently deleted by accident.

I waver between 4 and 5 stars. I'd say 4.4. A Land More Kind Than Home was a powerful novel illustrating the constant conflict in the deep South (in so-called "fundamentalists") between the nature of humans as Sinners and the hellfire, brimstone and eternal damnation of the soul for violating the strictures of the Word. A sex-related sin infringing on a marriage triggers nearly all the rest of the Seven Deadly. When the sin's primary procurer is a man who preaches the Word..., well it usually causes a tornado that harms or destroys many lives within a small community, not only the children whose parent was involved or child who was the victim, but the spouse, the parent, immediate family members, and the entire church community, many of whom come to see the church as their lives' moral center, which if rotten throws all into chaos.


Jimmy Swaggart

If I had not witnessed this happen several times in my life in the deep South (always from just outside the church [at the church of a best friend, an uncle, a first cousin]), maybe I wouldn't have been as impacted by this novel.


Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker

Wiley Cash is an excellent writer. This is a profoundly Southern story told from the point of view of a pre-teen boy looking back on his childhood and the evil side of religion, a Fall and the awful damage done.


Ted Haggard
Profile Image for Rebbie.
142 reviews133 followers
August 22, 2017
Wiley Cash is a master storyteller, and this book is indeed evidence of that.

It would be all too easy to give away spoilers by accident, so I'll just say that this book is deep, complex and thought-provoking. It's about something that most books don't talk about, which is how easy it is to manipulate someone, even to the point where they override their own parental instincts and put their loved ones in imminent danger.

It's written from the pov of a 13 year-old boy, a devout Christian woman in her 50s and an older male sheriff. Wiley Cash did a phenomenal job developing all 3 characters and making them sound realistic, sometimes frightfully so.

I can't wait to read more of Wiley Cash, as he's quickly becoming one of my all-time favorite writers.
Profile Image for Trudi.
615 reviews1,663 followers
April 28, 2013
This book has everything I love -- a Southern setting, secrets, family tragedy, religious zealotry run amok, and strong narrative voices. If I had read it, it would have been an easy four stars. But because I listened to it, and the audio version is one of the best I've ever heard, it's getting five stars.

This is a debut novel -- is it flawless? No. But you know what? I didn't care. I don't think you will either. I got so swept up and carried away by the story I was being told I was living it. I was right there in that small town watching it all go down with a flutter of anxiety in my stomach, and a lump of sadness in my throat.

What really made me love this story as an audiobook is that we have three narrators read by three different readers-- 1) Jess Hall, a precocious nine year old who has a penchant for spying and will eventually see something he wishes he hadn't that will change his life and the life of his town forever 2) Adelaide Lyle, a feisty old woman who has born witness to much of the town's history and dark secrets and 3) Clem Barefield, seasoned Sheriff with a painful past who must confront the evil that has taken hold of his town like a cancer.

Getting the story from these three very distinct voices and points of view is fantastic. It makes what is essentially a simple and straight forward story feel richer, more layered and emotional. I loved the reader for the Sheriff. What a fantastic performance. That voice married to the author's prose is a match made in heaven. In the best ways it reminded me of Tommy Lee Jones's performance in No Country for Old Men.

A Land More Kind Than Home is set deep in the heart of snake-handling country where you better hope that when the preacher arrives in town, he ain't the devil in disguise.

Read this book -- and if you do the audio thing -- listen. You won't be able to stop, I promise.

And since I have a thing for book trailers, this one does a great job of capturing the edgy, southern Gothic mood of this novel that's so portent with revelation, betrayals, and tragedy.

This review can also be found at Busty Book Bimbo.
Profile Image for Melki.
6,705 reviews2,516 followers
October 11, 2022
People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it's a drug, and they don't want to give it up once they've got hold of it. It's like it feeds them, and when they're on it they're likely to do anything these little backwoods churches tell them to do.

A preacher/con artist believes in that old time religion, administered with a healthy dose of Mark 16: 17-18
And these signs will follow those who believe: In my name they will cast out demons, they will speak in new tongues; they will pick up snakes with their hands; and when they drink deadly poison, it will not hurt them; they will place their hands on the sick, and they will get well.

Too bad some of his parishioners don't get well. They get quite the opposite, in fact. Now that the local sheriff has gotten involved, the residents of Marshall, North Carolina might discover that the demons are a lot closer than they expected.

This was Wiley Cash's debut novel, and it's not bad; a little slow at the start, but I can't imagine a better way to tell the story. In all, it's an involving Southern tragedy.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
350 reviews432 followers
February 1, 2016
People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it's a drug, and they don't want to give it up once they've got hold of it. It's like it feeds them, and when they're on it they're likely to do anything these little backwoods churches tell them to do. Then they'll turn right around and kill each other over that faith, throw out their kids, cheat on husbands and wives, break up families just as quick. I don't know exactly how long Carson Chambliss had been living in Madison County the first time I ever ran up against him. And I'm not saying this fanaticism started with him, because I know it didn't. That kind of belief has been up here a long time before I arrived on this earth, and it's my guess it'll still be around for a long time after I'm gone. But I've seen his work firsthand, and I still can't put my finger on what it is and why it affect folks like it does."

Mr. Cash, please tell me you are already working on another book.

I was first introduced to Wiley Cash last fall when my GR friend Angela M chose This Dark Road to Mercy as the monthly pick for a group read. I loved the characters and story development in that book, and this one is amazing too.

In "Home" Cash sets a dark tale in lightly populated rural North Carolina mountain village. The story is told through the eyes of three narrators -- the town midwife, the sheriff, and a 9 year old boy.

The essence of the book is about the danger of religious fanaticism. This setting is North Carolina, but the parallels to other situations -- across the country and across the world -- are not hard to see. The book succeeds due to the depth of the characters, terrific pacing, and Cash's storytelling prowess.

5 stars.

Profile Image for Cheri.
1,972 reviews2,824 followers
January 22, 2014
This book was on my list for some time, and when I saw that Wiley Cash has a new book coming out, I moved this up to next on my list and am glad that I did.
One of my oldest friends lives not too far from where this story takes place, and I've been there often enough to have spent time in an area where you see more churches than you can count. (My favorite is still "The Church of Bob.")

With a less-than-pure preacher behind the story, some too-curious-for-their-own-good children and a few no-nonsense neighbors watching out over all in this small town, Cash's debut novel will surely grab you and pull you in.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
486 reviews701 followers
October 29, 2014
People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it’s a drug, and they don’t want to give it up once they’ve got hold of it. It’s like it feeds them, and when they’re on it they’re likely to do anything these little backwoods churches tell them to do.

These folks (members of River Road Church of Christ in Signs Following) do whatever Carson Chambliss, their pastor, tells them to do; like,“pick up snakes, and drink poison, hold fire up to their faces just to see if it would burn them.” Chambliss is an ex-con and eerie dictatorial preacher who seems to enjoy the pain of others. The families of the people who die in his church don't hear directly from Chambliss, and neither do we. We don't hear from the disabled child of his purported healing, nor from the child’s mother. However, we do hear from the only nonconformist who was brave enough to leave his church and take the children of the town with her: Adelaide. So when one of the protected children slips through Adelaide's fingers, this is when the story unfolds.

I stayed up until the wee hours of the morning, eager to finish this thrill ride of goth and fanaticism. Reading the book reminded me of the things I’d unearthed a few years prior, when I lived in an Appalachian town and studied the town’s history, only to discover snake handling embedded in its religious fabric. Apparently, Wiley Cash also found this kind of information appealing, “I’ve always been interested in the Pentecostal tradition, especially the Holiness movement that takes the Bible as the literal word of God, particularly Mark 16: 17-18,” Cash said in an interview.

In pure Faulkner style, this story of Southern Goth progresses through separate narratives, the perspectives of three very different characters living in a small town in North Carolina. I had trouble deciding which character I liked best—although Adelaide did lure me in the beginning. Yet I sense that this was not the author’s concern, to have me fall heads over heels for his characters, that is. Most likely the intention was that I fall for the story, for the focus here is on the type of evocative and intriguing storytelling that has you turning the page.
Profile Image for Faith.
2,052 reviews612 followers
June 16, 2022
Set in Madison County, North Carolina, this was a beautifully written book, but a really sad story. I listened to the audio version of the book, and the narrators were very convincing conveying the various points of view of a 9 year old boy, an elderly woman and the local sheriff, whose lives were all changed by the pastor of a secretive church and its snake-handling congregation. In addition to the central plot, there are poignant back stories on each of the characters.

I took the book as a perfect example of why there should be no such thing as organized religion. I also felt is was a representation of a passive, insular, anachronistic and superstitious community. I doubt that the author would agree with either of my assessments, but maybe he just made his book too realistic and convincing.

This is the second book I've read from this author and I'd be happy to read any thing else that he writes.
Profile Image for Dana.
211 reviews
March 7, 2016
How could I not have known Wiley Cash existed until a few months ago? A Land More Kind Than Home takes place in Madison County where my dad was born! My dad died in an automobile accident when I was young, so most of my memories of Madison County go back to before I turned 12 years old, but I was immediately transported back to those country roads and the tobacco farm he grew up on, the minute I started reading this book.

I savored every page of Cash's lyrical storytelling. He did an excellent job capturing the local color of the Appalachian people. It brought back so many memories for me. My sister and I would spend a week with my grandparents in the summer on their farm in Madison County. All people in that area aren't like the characters in this book (my dad and grandparents certainly were not), but so, so many are! We were always told not to wander too far off into the woods or beyond their house because there were some "really mean and crazy people" in that area, so we were always a little scared. I loved hearing them tell stories about the people in that area and wondered how much was true. The stories and characters in this book resembled those tales so much! After my grandmother died, my grandfather remarried and moved and left the tobacco farm to my sister and I. They had leased it to a farmer and we continued to do so until we sold it back in the early 90s. I was filled with nostalgia reading about the farms and land in this book.

My mother told me that my dad had talked, many times, about the religious fanaticism in that area and said the lines I read to her from the book sounded so familiar to stories he had told her. He had known people who handled snakes and did the sorts of things Cash writes about, all in the name of God...which is the foundation of this book.

Cash writes:
"I'd seen people I'd known just about my whole life pick up snakes and drink poison... Holy people too. God-fearing folks that hadn't ever acted like that a day in their lives. But Chambliss convinced them it was safe to challenge the will of God. He made them think it was all right to take that dare if they believed."

"People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it's a drug, and they don't want to give it up once they’ve got hold of it. It's like it feeds them...they'll turn right around and kill each other over that faith, throw out their kids, cheat on husband and wives, break up families just as quick."

This is an unforgettable southern ballad of good and evil. I can't stop thinking about these people. I will be talking about this book to everyone I know. Thanks to GR friend Jennifer for introducing me to Wiley Cash! I am moving on to This Dark Road to Mercy - my first audiobook!
Profile Image for Liz.
2,477 reviews3,363 followers
February 17, 2016
A beautifully told sad tale, all the more so for the reader being able to see exactly where it will all end.
Profile Image for Connie G.
1,904 reviews634 followers
October 13, 2014
Preacher Carson Chambliss is as slithery and venomous as the snakes he handles during his church services. The sign in front of the church proclaims Mark 16: 17-18: "And these signs will follow those who believe: In my name they will cast out demons, they will speak in new tongues; they will pick up snakes with their hands; and when they drink deadly poison, it will not hurt them; they will place their hands on the sick, and they will get well."

The story is narrated by three members of a poor community in the Gunter Mountain area of North Carolina. Adelaide Lyle, a religious woman, tries to keep the children away from the pastor she does not trust. Jess Hall is the nine-year-old son of Ben and Julie, and the brother of the mute Christopher ("Stump"). Clem Barefield is the county sheriff, a good man who is dealing with personal losses.

When Stump looks through a window, he sees things that Chambliss wants to keep secret. The pastor convinces Julie Hall to bring her mute son Stump to a healing ceremony with tragic results. This sets off a series of heartbreaking and violent events. As the book ended, there was a slight sense of hope, second chances, and redemption for this mountain community.

While religious frenzy can spring up almost anywhere, one wonders if the desire for excitement and sense of community made these undereducated, impoverished people more vulnerable to an evil charlatan. Wiley Cash is a good storyteller who transports the reader to the Southern mountains. The characters were engaging, and I especially liked the interaction between Jess and his grandfather, hoping he will do things right this time. After enjoying Cash's debut novel, I'll be looking for his newest book This Dark Road to Mercy.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 3,746 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.