cover image THE HALF-MAMMALS OF DIXIE

THE HALF-MAMMALS OF DIXIE

George Singleton, . . Algonquin/Ravenel, $22.95 (287pp) ISBN 978-1-56512-354-0

Singleton expands upon the peculiar conceits of his debut collection, These People Are Us, in these 15 offbeat stories. Set mostly around the little South Carolina backwater of Forty-Five, they take on everything from racism to alcoholism to head lice, with plenty of laughs along the way. A hapless father clumsily tries to use his nine-year-old son to win back his high-school sweetheart (now the boy's teacher) in "Show and Tell," sending him off to school with old love notes, corsages and jewelry he had given her and making the boy pass them off as precious antiques. Another father launches a one-man crusade against a racist newspaper deliverer in "Fossils." "What Slide Rules Can't Measure" details the bizarre lives of denizens of the flea market circuit, while the title story follows an aquarium salesman to a bizarre motivational seminar, where he meets a scarred woman who sells audio books to the blind. "This Itches, Y'all" features a boy who fled youthful ignominy as the star of an educational film on head lice, then returns to his 25th class reunion to find unexpected celebrity. As in the first volume, the narrators tend to be relatively sophisticated men (or boys) who find themselves surrounded by feckless "pallet-heads." Some may find the tone of intellectual superiority condescending, but it's usually tempered by self-deprecation, to wonderful comic effect. Agents, Liz Darhansoff and Kristin Lang.(Sept. 13)

Forecast:Singleton seems to be building up a reputation, as evidenced by a recent NPR feature, as well as appearances in Harpers, the Atlantic and other literary reviews. A national ad campaign and 10-city author tour will help keep up the momentum.