Reader Score
75%
75% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 10 reviews on
When Darl Moody went hunting after a monster buck he's chased for years, he never expected he'd accidentally shoot a man digging ginseng. Worse yet, he's killed a Brewer, a family notorious for vengeance and violence. With nowhere to turn, Darl calls on the help of the only man he knows will answer, his best friend, Calvin Hooper. But when Dwayne Brewer comes looking for his missing brother and stumbles onto a blood trail leading straight back to Darl and Calvin, a nightmare of revenge rips apart their world. The Line That Held Us is a story of friendship and family, a tale balanced between destruction and redemption, where the only hope is to hold on tight, clenching to those you love. What will you do for the people who mean the most, and what will you grasp to when all that you have is gone? The only certainty in a place so shredded is that no one will get away unscathed.
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The Line That Held Us by @DavidJoy_Author as read by @MacLeodAndrews finished. I'd been nursing it a while. I've made comments along the way. It's a truly authentic story from the characters to it's slice of the Smokey Mountains. Beautifully written.
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We're so thrilled that #TheLineThatHeldUs by @DavidJoy_Author and #WhereTheCrawdadsSing by Delia Owens are featured in @Southern_Living's Best Southern Books of 2018! https://bit.ly/2Q9haNT
Author of “When the Dead are Razed” (@SlantBooks, FA2021) | IMPAC Dublin Award nominee | Winner of ScreenCraft’s Cinematic Short Story Award | he/him/his
@Alpha_Lupus Well, before David Joy’s THE LINE THAT HELD US was banned, I was teaching it as Southern Gothic, connecting it to O’Connor, and teaching literary concepts like rising action, dramatic irony, climax & denouement.
"Unflinching . . . Joy writes about rough-hewn men and women eking out a living in an economically depressed area, trying to avoid--but often affected by--violence and drugs that permeate the region. Their lives are tied to the land, its history and their families who established lives there decades ago."--Associated Press
"A suspenseful page-turner, complete with one of the absolutely killer endings that have become one of Joy's signatures."--Los Angeles Times
"Exquisitely written, heart-wrenching . . . Joy's descriptions are lyrical and lingering."--Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel
"David Joy's novel brought me to my knees. Exquisitely written and heart-wrenching, it reminded me of Faulkner in its dark depiction of family loyalty -- that "old fierce pull of blood." . . . Joy's descriptions are lyrical and lingering. . . . In the end, the line that holds Joy's characters may be fraught and frayed, but its pull is fierce."--Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Joy has proved adept with southern noir in his first two novels, and he nails it again here, in the actions of characters who act as they must, for the sake of family and friendship, given their nature. This is fiction as beautiful and compelling as it is searing."--Booklist (starred review)
"Poverty, class, violence, addiction, isolation: No one writes about the issues facing rural America as clearly, as fairly, or as well as David Joy. The Line That Held Us plumbs the depths of friendship and family, uncovering truths that are stamped on the page with blistering realism."--Wiley Cash, author of The Last Ballad
Praise for The Weight of This World
"Bleakly beautiful. . . [a] gorgeously written but pitiless novel about a region blessed by nature but reduced to desolation and despair."--Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review
"Darkly stunning Appalachian noir."--Huffington Post
"Scenes unfold at a furious pace, yet contain such rich description that readers will do well to read slowly, savoring Joy's prose. . . . Joy's work perfectly aligns with the author's self-described 'Appalachian noir' genre, as a sticky film of desperation and tragedy cloaks everything his characters touch. April, Aiden and Thad are hopelessly conflicted, dripping with history and heartache, yet they cling to unique dreams about what life could look like if they carried a bit less weight of the world upon their shoulders."--Associated Press