Jeff Griffeth
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griffeth.bsky.social
Jeff Griffeth
@griffeth.bsky.social
Scribbling
My favorite sentence in the book. What an image!
September 9, 2025 at 12:57 PM
This is a good one. Source material for several episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents TV program back in the day.
February 2, 2025 at 7:10 PM
“One thing I’ve learned . . . Everything seems fine until it ain’t. And then we come to see it wasn’t never ‘fine.’”

🧵7/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
this. A resonating figure for me was Miz Lottie, a spunky and resilient octogenarian who has seen it all and is able to code switch as easily as breathing. It’s this character who utters the defining words of this book:

🧵6/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
Due doesn’t hold back in this depiction, and these passages can be tough to get through. She is a very good writer, and many of the passages positively sing with narrative insight. Things get a bit formulaic and predictable in the final act, but that’s expected and excusable in a novel such as

🧵5/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
This story of a young boy unfairly sent to the 1950 Reformatory of the title in the Deep South that is frequented by “haints” of the dead boys who preceded him narrows its focus on the injustice of thinly veiled prisons that were a part of the apparatuses that helped keep the white status quo.

🧵4/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
And shades of The Underground Railroad with its blending of fantastic elements with sober realism. Heck, there’s even a soupçon of Ghostbusters sprinkled in. And while some of this feels like a bit of a retread, in the end this book manages to solidify into its own entity.

🧵3/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
And ok, there are ghosts, I suppose. But the genre label “horror” does not really jive with this novel. Reading this book is to be, ahem, haunted by the specter of other works before it. There’s Beloved, of course, front and center.

🧵2/7
December 16, 2024 at 7:53 PM
This one reads more as a police procedural, and I found the characters to be engaging and well-drawn. This and GOTW are the only books of hers that I’ve read. I think she does a nice job of world building and character development, at least in the reader’s eyes. Hope you enjoy!
December 14, 2024 at 11:41 AM
This, coupled with The God of the Woods, has established Liz Moore (in my mind, anyway) as a writer to eagerly await, and I’ll be reading everything she publishes from here on out.

🧵4/4
December 6, 2024 at 3:20 AM
Some of the better surprises come from the narrator herself; there’s just something to be said about a first person narrator by-the-way-ing critical previously unmentioned information late in the proceedings.

🧵3/4
December 6, 2024 at 3:20 AM
This is written in a tight first-person narrative, and the pleasures come from the slow build of the family history and the exploding reveals which are so great in number that at least a few are guaranteed to catch even the most astute reader off guard.

🧵2/4
December 6, 2024 at 3:20 AM
Easily the book of the year. Prepare to get lost in these pages (and don’t forget to sit down and yell).

🧵4/4
November 23, 2024 at 1:46 AM
The real thrill here is the unveiling of the mysteries (plural) and the surprising reveals. There’s class drama, there’s sexual politics, there’s a bit of everything you’ve been looking for in your next big read.

🧵3/4
November 23, 2024 at 1:46 AM
It grabs the reader and propels them along with the same urgency of a Donna Tartt or Pat Conroy. A camper has gone missing from a sleepover camp in 1975, but you really don’t want to know too much more than that going in.

🧵2/4
November 23, 2024 at 1:46 AM
Just finished it. Excellent from start to finish
November 23, 2024 at 12:30 AM
Stick with it for sure
November 23, 2024 at 12:29 AM