Spread the Word ...
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit StumbleUpon Help
Amazon has released a podcast excerpt for the audiobook “Rhett Butler’s People” by Donald McCaig. The book has received solid reviews, and the excerpt runs just more than 6 minutes.
“In the capable hands of narrator John Bedford Lloyd, Donald McCaig’s Rhett displays just the right mix of pride and swagger,” writes Amazon. “Listen now and get a taste of one of the most eagerly anticipated novels of the season!”
Publishers Weekly says: “Was it strictly necessary to our understanding of Gone With the Wind’s dashing hero to flesh out his backstory, replay famous GWTW scenes from his perspective, and crank the plot past the original’s astringent denouement? Perhaps not, but it’s still a fun ride. In this authorized reimagining, Rhett, disowned son of a cruel South Carolina planter, is still a jauntily worldwise charmer, roguish but kind; Scarlett is still feisty, manipulative and neurotic; and the air of besieged decorum is slightly racier. (Rhett: “My dear, you have jam at the corner of your mouth.” Scarlett: “Lick it off.”) But it says much about the author’s sure feel for Margaret Mitchell’s magnetic protagonists that they still beguile us. McCaig (Jacob’s Ladder) broadens the canvas, giving Rhett new dueling and blockade-running adventures and adding intriguing characters like Confederate cavalier-turned-Klansman Andrew Ravanel, a rancid version of Ashley Wilkes who romances Rhett’s sister Rosemary. He paints a richer, darker panorama of a Civil War-era South where poor whites seethe with resentment and slavery and racism are brutal facts of life that an instinctive gentleman like Rhett can work around but not openly challenge. McCaig thus imparts a Faulknerian tone to the saga that sharpens Mitchell’s critique of Southern nostalgia without losing the epic sweep and romantic pathos. The result is an engrossing update of GWTW that fans of the original will definitely give a damn about.”
Click here to listen to Amazon’s podcast excerpt of Rhett Butler’s People
.
Below is a a very short trailer for the book:
N.Y. Times Book Reviews
The New Yorker Book Reviews
Publishers Weekly Book Reviews
USA Today Book Reviews
- For kids, magical reading takes wing this fall
- New Bob Woodward book announced
- Obama book falls victim to booksellers' rivalry
- 'Black & White' jumps off the page
- 'The Anglo Files' may ignite a new battle of Britain
- Rushdie condemns cancellation of Muhammad novel
- Presidential race one for the books
- 'Telex From Cuba': Innocence is lost
- Family ties unbind in Haigh's 'The Condition'
- How Mandela won over a nation at a rugby game
Amazon Daily
- End Zone
- The Seeds of Change: Top Five Things You Can Do
- Sly Mongoose by Tobias Buckell: Five Reasons to Grow Up on Planet Chilo
- Old Media Monday: Reviewing the Reviewers
- End-o'-the-Week Kid-Lit Roundup
- Graphic Novel Friday: The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard
- YA Wednesday: A Hand-Holding Librarian, a Grown-up Bella, and Olympic Triumphs
- John Scalzi on Why You Should Care About Zoe's Tale
- The Roth of Cohen
- Not So Fast: Reconsider Simon Morden's The Lost Art
Bookseller Links:
RSS FEEDS
Recent Posts
- From Oregon to DC: Bookish Bed and Breakfasts Provide Novel Vacations
- Book Review: Messiah - The First Judgement: The Chronicles of Brothers by Wendy Alec
- Book Review: Eat This Not That! by David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding
- Book Review: Mountain Top by Robert Whitlow
- Book Review: The 12 Second Sequence by Jorge Cruise
- Book Review: The Shack by William P. Young
- Book Review: Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld
- Book Review: How Not To Look Old by Charla Krupp
- Reading Into Presidential Hopefuls
- ‘Three Cups of Tea’ Promotes Peace, Climbs Bestseller List
SF Gate Book Reviews
- Lessing imagines alternate world for parents
- Fiction review: 'Twenty Fragments'
- 'Why We Hate Us' by Dick Meyer
- Jonathan Mahler's 'The Challenge'
- Rushdie criticizes publisher for pulling novel
- Mendelsohn's 'How Beautiful It Is'
- 'What Happened to Anna K.'
- Real-life stories about immigration - told by real-life immigrants
- 'Plague War': Humanity fights for survival
- Nonfiction review: 'Master of Ceremonies'
Author/Book Review Podcasts from NPR
Seattle Times Book Reviews
L.A. Times Book Reviews
Powell's
- The executive branch maneuvers, and courtroom battles, where the rights and lives of detainees are concerned.
- After the Ball
- Read It Before They Screen It: Sleeper, Cryptozoo Crew, and Julius
- Book News for Tuesday, August 19, 2008
- Postcard from the Edge
- Master of Conventions
- Yes, Sir! Very Well, Sir!
- Read It Before They Screen It: Temple Grandin
- Book News for Monday, August 18, 2008
- My Other Car’s a Baby




Leave a Comment
trackback address