Meet Charley Hull, erstwhile newspaper reporter, the latest casualty of a dying industry, and the voice of David Wesley Williams's most personal and poignant novel yet. Come Again No More is an elegy with heart and gallows humor, told in Charley's lyrical and oft-profane voice. It begins with a wake and ends with a rebirth, and in between, we see Charley confront the man who fired him, comfort himself with entirely too much bourbon and song, and cope with what's left of a life given to a job he's loved and lost. Along the way we meet Charley's colleagues, from the old columnist Madison, a bulldog of a reporter who wrote-and drank-like an Irish poet, to the talented young James Ricketts, whom Charley fears will "do something romantic" like throw himself into the Mississippi River. One will die by his own hand, but Charley bottoms out and gets back up, with the help of old friends and a new love. Come Again No More is Southern literature with shades of Charles Portis (like Charley Hull, and the author, a former Memphis newspaper reporter), but also with a whiff of the Irish to it-think the playful language and place-as-character of Joyce's Ulysses ("Good puzzle would be cross Memphis without passing a barbecue joint.") or the riotous blasphemy of Roddy Doyle's Barrytown books.
Industry Reviews
David Wesley Williams' Come Again No More is a bracing and irresistible headlong dive into the adventures of a middle-aged man trying to decide what he wants to be when he grows up. It's a tale like a beguiling blue yodel oscillating between heartache and hilarity, with a gallery of eccentrics whose dysfunction you'll come to envy and a voice as suffused with wit as a Southern-fried George Bernard Shaw. Enjoy!
-Steve Stern, author of A Fool's Kabbalah and The Pinch
Come Again No More is simply the best work of Southern literature I've ever read, a story so lyrical and lovingly drawn - and spit-take funny - that the ghost of William Faulkner might just throw rocks at his best work. I read the book in a day, and I never do that.
-Bryan Denson, author of The Spy's Son