Coal Dust on Purple Asters
| Category: | Fiction — Thriller |
|---|---|
| Author: | Jeffrey L. Carrier |
| Number of Pages: | 100 |
| ISBN-13: | 979-8990311725 |
| ASIN: | B0G8HH5RYY |
Jeffrey L. Carrier's Coal Dust on Purple Asters is a
collection of three interconnected stories set in the coal fields of Eastern
Kentucky. In ''Rain on Chinquapin Holler,'' Vergie Hicks endures her
husband's infidelity until a devastating flood prompts a sacrifice that might
save the children. “A Sprig of Purple Asters” follows May Owens during the
Depression, who burns her cabin to escape her criminal brothers. But the
outcome delivers the opposite of her expectations, a redemption she never saw
coming. “Red Snow in the Kentucky Woods” reveals a decades-old family secret
when grandson Cory tracks down his missing uncle, James Herald, who fled a
mining destiny after accidentally killing his grandfather, only to learn his
mother took the blame to protect him. These stories span generations of
struggle, loss, and grit in Burfield County, illustrating how trauma and love
echo through time.
Jeffrey L. Carrier masterfully employs authentic Appalachian
dialect to ground the story in realism without any caricatures. The characters
are genuinely human and believable; women like Vergie and Evvie exhibit
steadfast dignity even when living in poverty, while men like Wiley and James
seek redemption for past sins. I enjoyed the symbolism that permeates the book,
from the coal dust representing inescapable hardship to the purple asters
signifying hope and memory. The imagery was absorbing for me, and the author’s
terrific descriptions rendered the locales and scenes with an immediacy that
kept me reading. I also loved how the author handles characterization with minor
characters in one story becoming central in another. Coal Dust on Purple
Asters is one of the rare books that skillfully examines fatalism pitted
against agency, and the experiences of the characters are brilliantly drawn
against the dangerous mining industry and economic despair. This one was a
winner for me, with the crisp prose, the sophisticated characters, and
unpredictable plot twists in each of the three tales.