"This brilliantly observed and poignantly written memoir . . . is about what really defines the South--the real common denominator in our contested little matrix of blacks and whites, Jews and gentiles: family." --The Washington Post
"Sensual. . . . Rich in detail. . . . Lightman, a physicist and novelist, shines a lush and tender light on his family's storied past." --The New York Times Book Review "Raises goose-pimples of readerly delight. . . . Lightman bends his nostalgia through the prism of a writer's creativity the way light through a projector blooms into a story on the screen." --The Boston Globe "A celebration of life's possibilities and the way we remember them." --Los Angeles Review of Books