
"Taylor, who is still in his twenties, writes with wit, zest and skill. . . . Kentucky is lucky to have a writer as weird, unique and gifted as Alex Taylor. In the long queue of very good contemporary Southern writers, here's a guy who can cut to the front."
--Pamela Miller, The Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"He depicts seemingly archetypal female roles: recent widows, spurned wives, cynical teenagers--and sets them afire with earnest sexuality, guts, and as much straight-faced momentum as their male counterparts. There's chilling humor in this collection, purple violence, snow-blighted landscapes, demolition derbies, and at least a dozen forthright and heretofore unused descriptions of the heart."
--Oxford American
"This is the beautiful paradox of Taylor, a writer whose visions of a hard and ugly truth also tap into the quiet depths of the rural soul, a young man who's told he frowns too much, yet can't stop making jokes at his own expense. . . . Taylor might not be Western Kentucky's best-kept secret for very long."
--Erin Keane, The Courier-Journal