Demon Copperhead: A Novel
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WINNER OF THE 2023 PULITZER PRIZE FOR FICTION
A New York Times “Ten Best Books of 2022 * An Oprah’s Book Club Selection * An Instant New York Times Bestseller * An Instant Wall Street Journal Bestseller * A #1 Washington Post Bestseller
“Demon is a voice for the ages—akin to Huck Finn or Holden Caulfield—only even more resilient.” —Beth Macy, author of Dopesick
“May be the best novel of 2022. . . . Equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking, this is the story of an irrepressible boy nobody wants, but readers will love.” (Ron Charles, Washington Post)
From the acclaimed author of The Poisonwood Bible and The Bean Trees, a brilliant novel that enthralls, compels, and captures the heart as it evokes a young hero’s unforgettable journey to maturity
Set in the mountains of southern Appalachia, Demon Copperhead is the story of a boy born to a teenaged single mother in a single-wide trailer, with no assets beyond his dead father’s good looks and copper-colored hair, a caustic wit, and a fierce talent for survival. Relayed in his own unsparing voice, Demon braves the modern perils of foster care, child labor, derelict schools, athletic success, addiction, disastrous loves, and crushing losses. Through all of it, he reckons with his own invisibility in a popular culture where even the superheroes have abandoned rural people in favor of generations ago, Charles Dickens wrote David Copperfield from his experience as a survivor of institutional poverty and its damages to children in his society. Those problems have yet to be solved in ours. Dickens is not a prerequisite for readers of this novel, but he provided its inspiration. In transposing a Victorian epic novel to the contemporary American South, Barbara Kingsolver enlists Dickens’ anger and compassion, and above all, his faith in the transformative powers of a good story. Demon Copperhead speaks for a new generation of lost boys, and all those born into beautiful, cursed places they can’t imagine leaving behind.
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ASIN : B09QMHZ53K
Publisher : Harper (October 18, 2022)
Publication date : October 18, 2022
Language : English
File size : 5839 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 556 pages
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Customers find the book riveting, compelling, and brilliant. They praise the writing quality as excellent, superior, and eloquent. Readers describe the story as insightful, powerful, and extensive. They appreciate the depth of characters and the distinct voice for the protagonist. Customers describe the story as believable, intriguing, and real. They also find the book engaging, enjoyable, and rewarding.
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8 reviews for Demon Copperhead: A Novel
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Matthew –
Shadows Cast down help illuminate Appalachia
The coal-filled mountains of Appalachia cast darkness on the small towns dotted throughout the eastern us. The book begins as the main character, Demon, starts to tell his story, which is a twisting path at the bottom of the mountain that begins interjectory not up the mountain but down into the darkness where spiderwebs of misfortune are found deep in the coal mines. Demonâs childhood is a spiral of terrible circumstances and an environment accompanied by adults who make poor decisions in a community that thrives on coal and drugs (both legal and illegal.) Demon, throughout his childhood, is raised by his young mother, a drug addict, and his neighbors, the Peggots, who assist in trying to keep Demon on a straight path as they deal with the same institutional issues living in the mountaintop small-town Appalachia, drug addiction, crime, poverty, and a poor economy.âThe wonder is that you could start life with nothing, end with nothing, and lose so much in between.âDemonâs mother soon marries a man called Stoner, who is abusive to both Demon and his mother; during their marriage, Demonâs mother relapses, and Demon and Stoner struggle as Demon attempts to call for help and Stoner attempts to stop him, and Demon loses his mother and his unborn sibling. After his motherâs death, heâs given to a foster home where he is worked like hired help on a tobacco farm, echoing the horribleness of how the American foster system can harm a child. Demon learns the ins and outs of the family on this farm through his peers getting into trouble, lusting for a good meal, and starting to take drugs for fun. Eventually, Demon, as he ages and moves to another foster family who struggles in the poverty of Appalachia, Demon runs away to his grandmotherâs house in Murder Valley, Tennessee. On his trip, he meets a preacher, gets his money stolen by a prostitute, and sleeps in a barn. Eventually, he meets Betsy Woodall and her disabled brother Dick who get Demon back in shape and, using her connections, gets him a foster home with a football coach. Demonâs problems for a short while disappear, as he starts school again, taking special classes in art and getting by in other courses, but eventually, the freedom of youth escapes him, and he spirals back down, even as heâs the star player a football team the pinnacle of any small town. Â Demon eventually gets injured and addicted to oxicotten on a legal script that doctors at the time were pushing to everyone to deal with pain, knowing the drug was addictive; in doing so, Demon falls for a girl, Dori, who had her own addiction issues and Demonâs life course even when going well for just a few short years spirals again.âI said probably they were just scared he was going to put ideas in our heads.â She smiled. âImagine that. A teacher, putting ideas in kidsâ heads.âThe ending is not a tragic blunder about addiction and poverty but a tour of struggle and pain as Demon grows and fails and picks himself up, eventually using his artistic skills to slowly build a world around him that may give him enough structure to break a cycle that many fail to do. Eventually, Demon realizes the few people close to him who constantly annoyed him were the very few people that only wanted Demon Copperhead to stand tall and be the better person he deserved to be.âI can still feel in my bones how being mad was the one thing holding me together.âThe bookâs plot is based on a request given to Demon during his struggles and is only released at the end. Mrs. Kingsolverâs writing style has a tone and character not seen in writing, often using appropriate slang and terms in the Appalachian area. Demonâs voice, written by Mrs. Kingsolver, is unique and baked in with a sincerity of hard luck and oppression not often found in modern literary writing. The book was hard to put down and flowed well chapter into the chapter as Demon continued to be put into horrible situations by those who were supposed to take care of him. At times, during the parts of the story about addiction and drugs, I would step away from the book because the trauma, pain, and hopelessness portrayed in the words and mood can become very real. These are all complex topics to read and, at times, to enjoy, but Mrs. Kingsolver provides the proper framing in Demonâs voice and the appropriate amount of darkness and light to keep the pages turning, never letting the pace or tone become too much for the reader. I would consider adding this book to every high school-required reading list.Demon Copperhead was the Womenâs Prize for Fiction in 2023, was named â10 best books of 2022â by the NYT and Washington Post, and shared the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction with Hernan Diazâs book Trust. This was the first time the prize was split.The novel has lingered on the fringes of books I wanted to read. I picked it up as part of my book club reads for 2024, and Iâm glad I did. I would recommend it to anyone, as it features superior prose, various authentic characters, and a modern setting with hundreds of tragedies, comedies, and dramas that must be told. Word of note, this book can get dark and deals with modern-day problems that may trigger emotions and people impacted in such situations.
Mark Stevens –
Copperhead Road
In an interview with Ezra Klein on his podcast, Barbara Kingsolver said she wanted to write âthe great Appalachian novel.â She conceded, however, that the notion âprobably sounds ridiculous.âIn particular, Kingsolver said she wanted to write about the fact that the people who live in Appalachia âare the most resourceful Americans youâre probably going to find anywhere.â Kingsolver, who was raised in rural Kentucky and now lives in rural Virginia, said she wanted to explore the shame she had internalized from her choice of a place to live.âHow many people well-meaning people have asked me, âhow could I live there in the middle of nowhere?ââ said Kingsolver. âPeople, this is my everywhere. This is my everything.âLater in the chat: âEverybody looks down on the country people and the country people sort of absorb that. You canât help but absorb it. So when I set out to write my great Appalachian novel. I was paralyzed with self-doubt because, I mean, my starting point was that I wanted to write about the opioid epidemic, which is become a huge assault on our culture, our families, our communities. Itâs devastated so many of the good things about this region that we value and that we love. And so I wanted to write about these kids whoâve been damaged and this place thatâs been damaged, and it seemed like a really hopelessly sad story. Plus, itâs about people that I didnât feel the outer world cared about. And so I just really, I spent a couple of years walking around and around this story, trying to figure out how to break into that house because I really felt sure nobody wants to read it.âWell, Kingsolver was wrong. At least, she was wrong about the interest in her topicânot her take on the people of Appalachia. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and 85,000+ ratings on Amazon (4.6 stars).Thereâs so much to like about Demon Copperhead but one of the main things is that itâs so breezily readable. For a 546-page epic, it goes down fast. Itâs episodic, a la Dickens, but the character flow is organic, unforced. Demonâs voice is engaging and his struggles are real, particularly when it comes to the challenges of the foster care system and the brutality of OxyContin addictions. Kingsolverâs empathy for addicts comes pouring out of the story. She is non-judgmental, plays it straight.Here is Demon, somewhat early on, looking back on the power of addiction: âI had roads to travel before I would know itâs not that simple, the dope versus the person you love. That a craving can ratchet itself up and up inside a body and a mind, at the same time that bodyâs strength for tolerating is favorite drug goes down and down. That the longer youâve gone hurting between fixes, the higher the odds that youâll reach too hard for the stars next time. That first big rush of relief could be your last. In the long run, thatâs how Iâve come to picture Mom at the end: reaching as hard as her little body would stretch, trying to touch the blue sky, reaching for some peace.âThatâs as good a passage about the feeling of addiction, and a description of its power, that Iâve ever read. (Kingsolver also read that section on Kleinâs podcast.)Kingsolver is a deceiving writer. Her style is unassuming and keen-eyed. The text is full of specificity. And energy. If you have any doubts about tackling this book because it looks too heavy, squash those notions. Hereâs the beginning of Chapter 34:âA lot of firsts that school year. First scrimmage, first JV game, first tackle, first passing yards made. First school dance, with an eighth-grader girl that was dead serious about it. So, my first real date, evidently. Angus and Sax went together dressed as Planet of the Apes, loser of their grade contest (Sax) being the human on a leash. This is Homecoming mind you, not Halloween, so. Not a date. But Angus took mine over, ordered the corsage from Walmart, took me to Goodwill where we found this dope white suit from the sixties. In my size, unbelievable. Iâve grown into my hands and feet by this point, and Iâm pushing 6 feet. Thank you, Mattie Kate.âMattie Kate is the housekeeper who worked for football Coach Wingate, where Demon lived while he was being developed as a potential football star. There are plenty of characters to keep track of, but Kingsolver gives them juicy nicknames (again, a la Dickens) or colorful descriptions so they are easy to track. U-Haul. Fast Forward. Waddles. Mouse. If you know David Copperfield (itâs been decades since I read it) youâll have a great time with what Kingsolver did with her names. For instance, Uriah Heep becomes Ryan Pyles.The âresourcefulnessâ of Demon is apparent in his stubborn ability to survive. Heâs smarter than he acknowledges, and very observant. In Demon Copperhead, bad things happen to bad people and bad things happen to good people, too. Many around Demon are not so fortunate and literally or metaphorically drown. You canât help but think about the failure of our institutions around child welfare, the foster care system, adult welfare, and drug abuse. But Demon finds his talent, develops a passion, and puts it to use. Hello, the power of art. And love. Every great novel, and this is one, is a love story in the end.Demon Copperfield was written with passion for Kingsolverâs very personal reasons. The execution is a thing of beautyâand something we can all admire.
Kindle Customer2 –
Heartbreaking & Fantastic
Title of Review: Heartbreaking & FantasticTitle: Demon CopperheadAuthor: Barbara KingsolverDate Purchased: 14 June 2023Amount Paid: $15.99Page number: 556 pagesGenre: Fiction, Contemporary, Literary Fiction, Coming of AgeDate of Review: 29 July 2024Winner of Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: 2023This was a book I read for my local book club.Set in the mountains of southern Appalachia, Demon Copperhead tells the story of a boy born to a teenage single mother in a single-wide trailer. With no assets beyond his deceased father’s good looks and copper-colored hair, a sharp wit, and a fierce survival instinct, Demon navigates the modern challenges of foster care, child labor, failing schools, athletic success, addiction, disastrous loves, and devastating losses. Narrated in his own unflinching voice, Demon grapples with his invisibility in a culture that has largely abandoned rural communities. Inspired by Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield, which drew from Dickens’ own experiences with institutional poverty, Barbara Kingsolver transposes a Victorian epic to the contemporary American South. She channels Dickens’ anger, compassion, and faith in storytelling’s transformative power to give voice to a new generation of lost boys and those born into beautiful yet cursed places they can’t imagine leaving.I think Kingsolver did a great job of telling the stories of damaged kids. I loved this book. Though it was hard to read in placesâheartbreaking and sadâit was also heartwarming. The writing was superb, and the story captivated me from start to finish. It examined critical social issues while educating and showcasing the resilience of the human spirit.
melinda –
Barbara Kingsolver is an exceptional author. The way she is able to weave a beautiful tale and bring the reader into the kind and circumstance of a character is magical. This is one of her best books. I could not put it down. I worked for years with trouble youth and this book is so accurate and so poignant to the real lived experience of the characters, it was haunting at times. These characters are going to stay with me for a very long time.
Stephany andrews –
I want to finish reading but I only received four chapters on this device.
N –
The novel is incredible and this new paperback edition very precious.
ulrike herbrik –
Toll geschrieben
CMK –
The narration and story telling is very skilled. Here is an author than understands the craft of writing and it is beautiful writing. The character development is amazing. This book draws you into Demon’s world so completely. You will laugh and cry with him and the empathy is built subtlety and completely. I want everyone I know to read this book and I urge you to buy it.