Hell at the Breech tells of an often overlooked part of America's history. When we think of the lawlessness in 19th-century America's Wild West, we often forget that other parts of the USA were also frontier territories that were ruled by the gun in the late-19th century. The rural South, suffering the effects of the Civil War, was also a place of small towns, far-flung rural communities and renegade outlaws. Tom Franklin tells a fictionalised version of the Mitcham War of Clarke County, Alabama in the 1890s. When a local politician was accidentally killed, a feud developed between rural outlaws and townspeople in which lawlessness and bloodshed reached shocking proportions.
Tom Franklin weaves a captivating tale based on these events. Franklin's spare, but vivid language is in the best tradition of Southern American writing. His observant eye picks up the detail of the ignorant and violent rural poor, as well as the hypocrisy and cruelty of the town dwellers. The frightening tale of redneck murderers and vengeful townsfolk reveals the darker side of human nature in a way that avoids both easy judgement and prurience. The violent story is told with simplicity and immense power rather than gratuitousness. Franklin hints at how the violent frontier past of the USA is part of her present inheritance, and so holds up a mirror to a society that is at once deeply religious and deeply violent. Franklin is a writer to watch. He explores powerful themes within a gripping story without apology. Like the hero of his story, he exercises restraint and dignity, but he shoots straight. --Dwight Longenecker
FROM THE PRAISE FOR HELL AT THE BREECH: 'Beautifully written and potent.' Daniel Woodrell, Washington Post 'A literary knockout. Franklin has cleverly woven history and fiction. Hell at the Breech is an impressive novel that should catapult Franklin into the big leagues.' USA Today 'Such exquisite prose, such depth of character and depth of emotion that you feel swept up in a terrible beauty. Hell at the Breech bears comparison only with other great novels, and it ensures a place for Tom Franklin in the highest ranks of our countrys new writers.' Dennis Lehane 'The most extraordinary first novel to come out of the South since Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain ... hypnotically captivating.' Orlando Sentinel FROM THE PRAISE FOR POACHERS: 'I am amazed by Franklin's power. I'm reminded, by the evocative strength of the prose and the relentlessness of the imagination, of William Faulkner.' Philip Roth 'It's as if the author kidnapped Raymond Carver's characters and set them loose in the Deep South.' New York Times Book Review 'Marvellous ... Franklin writes beautifully with an unsparing, detached eye.' The Times 'Franklin evokes time and place with language of eloquence and fire, and his journey through the evils men do leads down the old dark ways of the heart.' William Gay