Long Ago Last Summer | Austin Macauley Publishers ;
Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Wesley Moore III

Long Ago Last Summer

Pages: 258 Ratings: 5.0
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Long Ago Last Summer is a Southern Gothic gumbo part Flannery O’Connor, part Tennessee Williams with a dash of Delta blues. An array of unforgettable characters come alive on the page: village idiots, eccentric aunts, beloved dogs, and at least one serial killer, Donald ‘Pee Wee’ Gaskins. Moore’s memoir embodies the profound paradoxes of Southern culture against a landscape dotted with antebellum plantations, shotgun shacks, suburban subdivisions, Pentecostal churches, and juke joints.


Praise for Wesley Moore’s writing:

“Long Ago, Last Summer is, like life, sometimes hilarious, sometimes tragic, full of unforgettable characters whose power to hurt rivals their power to love. Wesley Moore is a child of the complicated South, and it’s a joy to ‘grow up and grow old’ with this terrific writer. This collection is a ‘guided tour of the haunted houses and cobwebbed attics’ of his youth, but it’s also the story of a man who discovers, through tragedy, that ‘the world is a marvelous place, full of good, compassionate people.”

– Lee Robinson, author of Lawyer for the Dog and Lawyer for the Cat.

“I found in these pages something of what Faulkner meant when he wrote, ‘The past is never dead. It is not even the past.’ Reading this book was like walking in the wind or swimming. I was touched at all points and conscious everywhere. I was also reminded of Huck Finn’s raw wisdom when he said about his adventures, ‘All of this is true and most of it happened.’”

– Chuck Sullivan, author of Zen Matchbox and The Juggler on the Radio.

A native South Carolinian, Wesley Moore III taught English at Porter-Gaud School in Charleston for 34 years before his retirement in 2019. Kirkus Reviews lauded his debut novel Today, Oh Boy as “a quietly sublime period piece” featuring “dazzling characters.” An anthologized author, he has published in various literary journals and won several writing awards. Wesley lives with his wife Caroline and stepdaughter Brooks on Folly Beach, South Carolina.


He also publishes the blog ‘You Do Hoodoo’ (wlm3.com).

Customer Reviews
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  • Kirkus Indie

    Moore presents a semiautobiographical collection of essays, short stories, and poetry set in the American South. The author characterizes this collection as a “sort of mosaic” of his life. Though most of the pieces are set in Moore’s home state of South Carolina, the contents are varied, from an account of the author’s late wife’s battle with cancer to a poem written for Nancy Reagan to a story about someone afraid of lightning. The work opens with the fictitious story of a man (based on Moore’s father) who quits his job so he can take up crop-dusting. The author later shares early memories of his life, including being attacked by a rooster and spending his first few years living at his grandparents’ “gas station/house.” In the 1970s, he attended the University of South Carolina; it was there that he was stuck with a roommate who spent his days “in his matchbox of a room drinking 16-oz. cans of Busch Bavarian beer while watching a black-and-white TV the size of a cafeteria tray.” One of the standout pieces involves the author hitchhiking to Folly Beach as a teenager—he and his brother survived an encounter with someone who was likely the serial killer Donald “Pee Wee” Gaskins. Even though the hitchhiking story is only four pages long, it fits a lot of frightening intrigue into a short space; the reader not only learns who Gaskins was, but gets to see the monster in action, doing things like casually burning a boy with a cigarette. Moore excels at describing such individuals, like a woman who wore a “brown woolen monkish garment, the hood coming to a point pulled up over her stark white hair.” Some tales do not have quite the same staying power—a poem about a dog that sometimes had “Stygian, technicolor diarrhea” is memorable mostly for that nauseating image. Still, Moore’s mosaic conveys much with a sense of humor and a sensitivity to life’s struggles. A heartfelt, highly personal assortment of lived experiences and fictionalized accounts.

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