I've not yet read my copy of "Go Set a Watchman," Harper Lee's long-lost, recently-discovered-under-murky-circumstances first novel. I will read it, and soon, but I have to admit, I'm afraid it will disappoint.
You might feel the same way, especially if you've read early reviews that mention a bigoted and racist Atticus Finch.
So here, to make us all feel better, are 10 great Southern novels (and story collections) that will not disappoint.
Go fetch yourself a mint julep and take a seat over there on the porch swing, under that magnolia tree. You have a lot of reading to do.
"Their Eyes Were Watching God," by Zora Neale Hurston. Set in Florida, this is the story of Janie Crawford, who grows from a young girl to a strong, independent woman, marrying three very different men along the way.
"A Summons to Memphis," by Peter Taylor. A man is called back to Memphis from his home in New York by his sisters, who want him to stop their elderly father from remarrying. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award.
"A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories," by Flannery O'Connor. Southern Gothic at its finest. Troubling stories by the great O'Connor. Cats and hats and grandmothers and Catholicism.
Pretty much anything by William Faulkner. Good luck! Any one of his complex and sometimes confusing novels will keep you busy for the rest of the summer. (But they are worth it.)