The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: How Far She Went: Stories, Mary Hood

How Far She Went: Stories

Mary Hood

Mary Hood's fictional world is a world where fear, anger, longing--sometimes worse--lie just below the surface of a pleasant summer afternoon or a Sunday church service.

In "A Country Girl," for example, she creates an idyllic valley where a barefoot girl sings melodies "low and private as a lullaby" and where "you could pick up one of the little early apples from the ground and eat it right then without worrying about pesticide." But something changes this summer afternoon with the arrival at a family reunion of fair and fiery Johnny Calhoun: "everybody's kind and nobody's kin," forty in a year or so, "and wild in the way that made him worth the trouble he caused."

The title story in the collection begins with a visit to clean the graves in a country cemetery and ends with the terrifying pursuit of a young girl and her grandmother by two bikers, one of whom "had the invading sort of eyes the woman had spent her lifetime bolting doors against."

In the story "Inexorable Process" we see the relentless desperation of Angelina, "who hated many things, but Sundays most of all," and in "Solomon's Seal" the ancient anger of the mountain woman who has crowded her husband out of her life and her heart, until the plants she has tended in her rage fill the half-acre. "The madder she got, the greener everything grew."

Book Details

  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
  • Publish Date: Aug 1st, 1992
  • Pages: 136
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.51in - 5.57in - 0.41in - 0.44lb
  • EAN: 9780820314419
  • Categories: Short Stories (single author)

About the Author

Hood, Mary: - MARY HOOD is the author of How Far She Went, a winner of the 1983 Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, Familiar Heat, And Venus is Blue, and A Clear View of the Southern Sky. Her work has been published in the Georgia Review, North American Review, and Yankee, among other publications. She was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame in 2014.

Praise for this book

[Stories] clear and compact as ancient poetry, and shockingly shrewd about the mysteries of human sadness.

--Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A first collection by an author with a great talent for shattering insights into her North Georgia rural characters. . . . Supremely successful.

--Kliatt

'Melodies low and private as a lullaby' these are what the country girl of 'A Country Girl' sings and are a fair description of Mary Hood's writing at its best.

--New Yorker