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FALLING DARK by Tim Tharp

FALLING DARK

by Tim Tharp

Pub Date: Oct. 1st, 1999
ISBN: 1-57131-030-4
Publisher: Milkweed

A rambling but interesting debut (winner of the Milkweed National Fiction Prize) about a troubled family that comes under the influence of a drifter and his drug-dealing boss. Single mothers can—t ever expect to have an easy time of it, but single mothers who drink too much have to be prepared for the worst. Donna Bless tries hard to do right by her boys Nelson and Wesley, but she’s basically a party girl at heart and can—t resist an evening (maybe even a whole night) at a local honky-tonk whenever the opportunity presents itself. One of her partners in crime is a strange, charismatic barfly named Roy Dale, who steps in one evening when a local cowboy comes on too strong after the third beer and won—t take no for an answer. Roy flattens the sap with a single punch, then offers Maggie a chaser. The result: she falls for him head over heels. Roy offers Wesley a job working on his friend Sam Casey’s farm, good money for outdoor work in the boy’s spare time. The Casey spread was at one time a full-fledged commune and is still pretty weird to this day. Nothing much grows there but marijuana, though there’s enough of that to keep everyone busy and ensure that Sam stays in the black. Sam himself is a decent sort, somewhat addled but humane. Roy, however, turns out to be a good deal less benign than he first appeared. For one thing, he’s a thoroughgoing lush, and he’s quickly becoming a kind of surrogate father to the boys. Maggie worries about his influence on them, but she herself has become so entwined in his world of drink and drugs that she doesn—t know how to get out. Can will power and mother’s love overcome ordinary human weakness? Even when it’s overlaid with addiction? Badly organized and far too loose, but Tharp’s debut has a poignancy and grace that gets it over the bumps on its way: Worth a look.