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David    Joy

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David Joy

Goodreads Author


Born
in Charlotte, The United States
Website

Twitter

Genre

Influences
Larry Brown, Daniel Woodrell, William Gay, Ron Rash, Jim Harrison

Member Since
April 2014

URL


David Joy is the author of the Edgar nominated novel Where All Light Tends to Go (Putnam, 2015), as well as the novels The Weight Of This World (Putnam, 2017), The Line That Held Us (Putnam, 2018), and When These Mountains Burn (Putnam, 2020). His memoir, Growing Gills: A Fly Fisherman's Journey (Bright Mountain Books, 2011), was a finalist for the Reed Environmental Writing Award and the Ragan Old North State Award for Creative Nonfiction. His latest stories and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Garden & Gun, and The Bitter Southerner. He is the recipient of an artist fellowship from the North Carolina Arts Council. His work is represented by Julia Kenny of Dunow, Carlson & Lerner Literary Agency. He lives in Jackson Cou ...more

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David Joy If you enjoy that type of darker story I'd suggest reading all of Ron Rash's work, particularly the short story collections (Chemistry, Burning Bright…moreIf you enjoy that type of darker story I'd suggest reading all of Ron Rash's work, particularly the short story collections (Chemistry, Burning Bright, Nothing Gold Can Stay), though I really like his novels as well, my favorite being The World Made Straight. If that's the type of story you're into, you might want to broaden to the rest of the South and read Larry Brown, William Gay, Barry Hannah, and Harry Crews, who I consider the godfathers of what I'm trying to do, their own writing being rooted in Faulkner and O'Connor and even McCarthy.

If you're wanting to stay within the North Carolina mountains, Charles Frazier and Wayne Caldwell are really great, but if we can open the conversation up to all of Appalachia the list gets really big. I love Silas House, especially his novel A Parchment of Leaves. As far as women, read Lee Smith and Darnell Arnoult and Pamela Duncan and Sharyn McCrumb.

There are a lot of really great young writers too, writers like Mark Powell and Charles Dodd White and Denton Loving and Sheldon Lee Compton. My favorite novel this year has been Robert Gipe's Trampoline, which is set in the Kentucky coal fields. There are just loads and loads of really talented writers in this region.

Also check out some anthologies like Degrees of Elevation, which collects a lot of these writers, with a new installment of that anthology series coming out this summer called Appalachia Now. There are also some really great journals like Still or Drafthorse or Appalachian Heritage that showcase a lot of emerging talent in the region. These journals are online, for the most part, and free to read.

If you're still reading this then that ought to keep your bedside table stacked up for a while. Hope that helps.(less)
David Joy
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Average rating: 3.89 · 24,945 ratings · 3,822 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
Where All Light Tends to Go

3.77 avg rating — 9,364 ratings — published 2015 — 19 editions
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The Line That Held Us

3.75 avg rating — 6,749 ratings — published 2018 — 13 editions
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When These Mountains Burn

4.06 avg rating — 3,743 ratings — published 2020 — 16 editions
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Those We Thought We Knew

4.30 avg rating — 2,574 ratings — published 2023 — 9 editions
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The Weight of This World

3.99 avg rating — 2,571 ratings — published 2017 — 8 editions
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Appalachia Now

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3.98 avg rating — 102 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Gather at the River: Twenty...

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4.19 avg rating — 81 ratings — published 2019 — 3 editions
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Growing Gills: A Fly Fisher...

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4.24 avg rating — 33 ratings — published 2011 — 3 editions
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Là où les lumières se perde...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Quotes by David Joy  (?)
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“There wasn’t any way out of that darkness but forward.”
David Joy, Where All Light Tends to Go

“That kind of love wasn’t for anyone outside the two of them. It was private and silent, sufficient as grace.”
David Joy, The Line That Held Us

“The tree with the deepest roots in this country is a tree of White supremacy. And the thing is, you don’t have to be the one who planted that tree or even the one who kept it watered or trimmed the branches to be someone who directly benefits from the shade it provides. There’s a whole lot of people sitting comfortably under that tree, and some of them recognize where they’re sitting and just won’t do anything about it because they like where they’re sitting, and then there are some of them who won’t even acknowledge that the tree’s there at all. Maybe they don’t acknowledge it because they can’t see it, or maybe they just don’t want to see it, but in the end none of that matters because they’re all benefiting from the same thing.”
David Joy, Those We Thought We Knew

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Topics Mentioning This Author

“They lay silently. She was staring at something across the room. She was making him feel uncomfortable. 'It wouldn't work. It's the attraction of opposites,' he said.

We're not opposites.'

I don't mean just you and me. Women fall in love when they get to know you. Men are just the opposite. When they finally know you they're ready to leave.”
James Salter

“Some souls aren't worth saving, I thought. There're some souls that even the devil wants no part of.”
David Joy, Where All Light Tends to Go

“There was a place where all light tends to go, and I reckon that was heaven.”
David Joy, Where All Light Tends to Go

“Light never shined on a man like me and that was certain. In a lot of ways, that made men like Daddy the lucky ones to have only ever known the darkness. Knowing only darkness, a man doesn't have to get his heart broken in search of the light. I envied him for that.”
David Joy, Where All Light Tends to Go

“Only the middle ground of this wicked world mattered, the vast gap that stretched between, and those who were born with enough grit to brave it.”
David Joy, Where All Light Tends to Go

616469 The Bitter Southerner Book Club — 314 members — last activity Jan 12, 2020 08:20AM
A place for Bitter Southerner Family Members to discuss their favorite Southern books of the moment — and in history. We've loaded the shelf with book ...more



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