Industry Reviews
My Little Town exposes the deep veins of resentment that drive so many Americans to cling to symbols of a lost past. Despite its dark themes, this is a gentle book; cosmopolitan Northerner D. B. Tipmore applies a measured mix of empathy and discernment to the tales of his adopted town.-- "The Journal Inquirer"
My Little Town is a remarkable book, profound and wise in its observations about life in the rural Deep South and elegantly written.--Larry Watson "author of Let Him Go and other works of fiction"
My Little Town is the tour de force of a writer whose unflinching honesty reveals the hidden layers and painful divisions within the American soul. In Tipmore's hands, Lovelady, Alabama, becomes a canvas to explore our common search for meaning and yearning for home. The book is profound, witty, and haunting.--Lars Brownworth, historian "author of Julius Caesar: The Roman Colossus"
D. B. Tipmore is not a damned Yankee; he is a writer's writer. My Little Town is a wildly fresh perspective on the South.--Sean Dietrich "host of the Sean of the South podcast and author of Stars of Alabama and Will the Circle Be Unbroken?"
D. B. Tipmore, a writer of urbane wit, moved to a small town in rural Alabama in the hope of making a home. This brilliant book, coming ten years later, is the result of his experiences there. Composed of ten revelatory, sad, funny, and incisive chapters, My Little Town introduces the reader to special insights Tipmore has gained about the town, the region, and himself. What results is the perfect book, compassionately observed, for those who want to head to the South -- or away from it.--Michael Tolkin, award-winning filmmaker "author of NK3 and The Player"
D. B. Tipmore's My Little Town captures the paradoxes of small-town Southern life. From their variants of chicken salad, to the inerrant study of the Protestant Bible, to the equal degrees of charm, rivalry, racial animosity, and willingness to help out at a moment's notice, the citizens of Tipmore's 'Lovelady' show us uncomfortable truths about how we live in such towns, and why some of us leave. A bittersweet portrait.--Terry Barr "author of Secrets I'm Dying to Tell You, Don't Date Baptists and Other Warnings from My Alabama Mother, and other books"
D. B. Tipmore's My Little Town reflects truths about only one of multiple 'Souths, ' the rural white South, but the mere existence of this book offers some hope toward a dream once thought impossible: that we might one day--all of us--come to care about each other.--Clyde Edgerton "author of Walking Across Egypt"
D. B. Tipmore's My Little Town reminds me how those of us who grew up in small Southern communities continue to be shaped by their unique alchemy of race, place, religion, and custom. But as these rural towns begin to fade, they must be reimagined, or else risk losing the ability to make newcomers feel like they belong. This small book offers a powerful statement about the importance of place, even as it urges reconsideration of the things that any one particular place holds most dear.--Ralph Eubanks "author of A Place Like Mississippi"
Set in a sleepy Southern community, My Little Town is the memoir of an outsider whose observations are fair and measured, infused with both empathy and poetry.-- "Foreword Reviews"
When an erudite bachelor Yankee set up housekeeping in central Alabama, it provided an opportunity to observe the best and worst about its citizens. There is an ancient prayer asking that God will allow us to see ourselves as others see us. I am not sure many folks in the Black Belt had D. B. Tipmore or his book in mind when they prayed that prayer, but My Little Town is its controversial answer.--Wayne Flynt, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Auburn University History Department
You can add My Little Town to that important list of books about the South that includes W. J. Cash's classic The Mind of the South. But where Cash portrays the region in broad generalities, D. B. Tipmore gets to the intimate heart of things by focusing his keen eye on a town and way of life that signify so many of today's small towns and the rural South, where old struggles with new--and old often wins. He's a talented storyteller with an honest, unflinching eye.--Robert Inman "author of Home Fires Burning and The Governor's Lady"