Chapter 16
A Community of Tennessee Writers, Readers & Passersby

Margaret Renkl

Infinity: I Am the Power They Can’t Tear Down

Infinity: I Am the Power They Can't Tear Down

Sherrilyn Kenyon
320 pages
$


“Kenyon, whose paranormal adult novels include 50 New York Times best-sellers, brings characters from her Dark Hunter series to teens with a new YA series featuring Nick Gautier, who appears here as a 14-year-old. After arriving at school and discovering that the football team members have turned into classmate-eating zombies, Nick sets out to stop the attacks, and in one unforgettable night, he learns that he has a pivotal role to play in an unseen world. The plot serves mostly as a device to introduce a dizzying array of characters, and the prose is laden with breathless ellipses and weighty pronouncements: ‘Anyone could feel the unearthly power that bled from the pores of this particular . . . being.’ But Kenyon keeps the supernatural action careening along, and conversational banter lightens the tone. Kenyon has ratcheted down her tone from the adult series considerably: there are no steamy sex scenes or oaths stronger than ‘dang,’ and there is little gore. Be prepared for lots of interest in the series from young Twilight fans.”

–Lynn Rutan, Booklist

In a Heartbeat: Sharing the Power of Cheerful Giving

In a Heartbeat: Sharing the Power of Cheerful Giving

By Leigh Ann Tuohy, Sean Tuohy, and Sally Jenkins
288 pages
$


“Those familiar with the film The Blind Side, or Michael Lewis’s best-selling book, will likely already know the inspiring story of how the Tuohys took future-NFL star Michael Oher into their home and adopted him. For anyone wondering what more there might be to say about it, the answer is: plenty. In a Heartbeat finds the Tuohys attempting to determine what it was that made them reach out to the homeless African-American boy they saw walking down the street in a t-shirt and shorts on a winter’s day. Leigh Anne and Sean had known tough times themselves and had put themselves on the lookout for troubled kids in need of help. As a white, southern, church-going family, they defy red-state/blue-state stereotypes (for instance, by sending their teen-age daughter to a seminar fostering racial and social justice); though Leigh Anne has been described as a ‘gun-toting Republican Christian,’ and admits to carrying weapons, she also claims to cross ‘party lines all the time.’ With Jenkins’s help they write with humor about their quirks and the joy that Michael brought to their family, finally arriving at the belief that ‘we can all change people’s lives by investing time in individuals.’”

Publishers Weekly

Hurricanes in Paradise

Hurricanes in Paradise

By Denise Hildreth
Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.
384 pages
$13.99


“When Riley Sinclair stepped into her new job as director of guest relations at a posh resort on Paradise Island, she felt the final pieces of her once-broken life coming together. But the waters become choppy when Riley discovers that some who come to the Atlantis Hotel are accompanied by paralyzing secrets and overwhelming fears. Riley and three guests are in desperate but unknowing need of each other, eventually forging unlikely yet powerful friendships. With a hurricane headed straight for the island, together they embark on a journey of laughter, heartache, and healing.”

—From the Publisher

Great MoonPie Handbook

Great MoonPie Handbook

By Ron Dickson
Pelican Publishing
160 pages
$14.95


“This humorous book filled with cartoons describes how the MoonPie affects all aspects of life, such as courtship, childrearing, construction, television, magazines, and movies. It explains MoonPie etiquette and how the treat should be used on social occasions, such as birthdays and anniversaries. Also included are the history, vast folklore, and ‘noble’ traditions associated with this great American institution.”

–From the Publisher

Ghosts & Haunts of Tennessee

Ghosts & Haunts of Tennessee

By Christopher Coleman
John F. Blair
160 pages
$12.95


“Tennessee is famous for more than just Elvis Presley, Davy Crockett, and Jack Daniel’s. The Volunteer State is also home to enough ghosts, haunts, and spirits to make your skin crawl. Christopher K. Coleman’s Ghosts and Haunts of Tennessee is a new collection of 28 tales of the supernatural. This compilation explores never-before-published legends that span the entire state, from the mysterious mountains of Appalachia to the haunted banks of the Mississippi River. Those familiar with Tennessee’s most famous apparitions will find new thrills in Ghosts and Haunts of Tennessee. Readers may have heard of the Bell Witch, but what of her sister, a vengeful spirit known to the folks on the eastern part of the Highland Rim as the Buckner Witch? This new compilation of authentic folklore offers a fresh look at things that go bump in the night in the Volunteer State.”

–From the Publisher

Elvis Presley's Memphis

Elvis Presley's Memphis

By The Commercial Appeal and Elvis Presley Enterprises
Pediment Publishing
176 pages
$39.95


“Elvis Presley Enterprises Inc. and Memphis award-winning newspaper, The Commercial Appeal, are proud to bring Elvis fans, historians and music lovers around the world an exciting new book, Elvis Presley s Memphis. Both entities have opened their significant archives and discovered photographs, documents and news stories that share Memphis through the eyes of the King of Rock ‘n Roll. This hard-bound, full color, collector’s book contains photos, reproductions of articles and more.”

From the Publisher

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