<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Wayland is the story of a perfect life interrupted by a chance encounter with pure evil. Eva and Andrew Nettles are a couple who found each other and married in mid-life, now living with their adopted daughter-until one day a hobo happens by. Can they see through his elaborate deceit in time to save their daughter?<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Set in southwestern Viginia in 1930, <em>Wayland </em>is the story of a perfect life interrupted by a chance encounter with pure evil. Eva and Andrew Nettles are a couple who found each other in the unlikeliest of circumstances and married in mid-life, now living a blissful country life with their adopted daughter--until one day a hobo happens by. Buddy Newman cannot believe his good fortune: this family has everything he needs, including the most beautiful little girl he's ever seen or dreamed of. Newman sets his plan in motion to charm and deceive the family and possess the object of his desires. Can they see through his elaborate deceit in time to save their daughter?</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>In <em>Wayland</em>, Rita Quillen writes of a Depression-era Appalachian community with immense vividness and immense empathy, but like the best novelists, her characters transcend their geographical locale to evoke concerns that touch upon the lives of all people. Whether as poet or as novelist, Quillen is a writer to be revered.</p><p>--Ron Rash, author of <em>Serena</em></p><p>"I stare at this white page and try to form the words right to name what I'm feeling to be able to explain myself to myself, as crazy as that sounds," says a character late in Rita Quillen's gorgeous new novel, <em>Wayland</em>. In language as poetic as it is fierce, anchored in the Appalachian mountains of the 1930s, <em>Wayland</em> explains a lost world to us, recreating it, revivifying it--crazy as that sounds. This is a beautiful and moving novel and deserves a wide readership.</p><p>--Mark Powell, author of <em>Firebird </em>and <em>Small Treasons</em></p><p>In the pages of <em>Wayland</em>, Rita Quillen takes the reader deep into the characters, history, and landscape of her native hills. Quillen is a storyteller of prodigious gifts, one of Appalachian literature's truly authentic voices.</p><p>--Amy Greene, author of <em>Bloodroot</em></p><p>A stranger comes to town--and the world is never the same. <em>Wayland </em>tells the story of an ideal family's entrapment in thrall that slowly turns to horror because of one man's wickedness and another man's blindness. These characters and places are richly drawn, and the tension keeps building until the end. As Quillen writes, "When you are Mars and Venus, you spin on, hurtling through stardust and blackness, suspended by the dark energy that binds everything together." We are bound here, too, by this dark energy and good story.</p><p>--Jim Minick, author of <em>Fire Is Your Water</em></p><br>
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