The Heaven of Mercury
A Novel
23 January 2004
Description
A National Book Award Finalist
Brad Watson's first novel was eagerly awaited after his breathtaking, award-winning debut collection of short stories, Last Days of the Dog-Men. In The Heaven of Mercury, Watson fulfills that literary promise with a humorous and jaundiced eye. Finus Bates has loved Birdie Wells since the day he saw her do a naked cartwheel in the woods in 1916. Later he won her at poker, lost her, then nearly won her again after the mysterious poisoning of her womanizing husband. Does Vish, the old medicine woman down in the ravine, hold the key to Birdie's elusive character? Or does Parnell, the town undertaker, whose unspeakable desires bring lust for life and death together? Or does the secret lie with some other colorful old-timer in Mercury, Mississippi, not such a small town anymore? With "graceful, patient, insightful and hilarious" prose (USA Today), Brad Watson chronicles Finus's steadfast devotion and Mercury's evolution from a sleepy backwater to a small city.
Reviews
"[A] lushly written novel of Deep Southern dream and landscape." — New York Times
"Extraordinary…. Mixes whimsy and hard truth in a way that’s heartbreaking…. Pungently erotic, and as affectionate as it is acidic… a perfect modern southern gothic." — Mark Rozzo, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"[A] superb novel, graced with lush and exciting prose in the Southern high rhetorical tradition." — Raleigh News and Observer
"Brad Watson has set his superb second novel in a small Mississippi city near the Gulf of Mexico. The heat, damp, whisky, bigotry and family skulduggery suggest juicy Southern Gothic. Although The Heaven of Mercury is born of that tradition, it transcends its parentage." — The Guardian
"An intensity reminiscent of Faulkner, a bleak humor that recalls Flannery O’Connor, a whimsy inspired by Eudora Welty and a spontaneity suggesting prime Barry Hanna… Reading The Heaven of Mercury certainly restores one’s faith in Southern literature’s ability to startle and surprise… the risks pay off with insightful observations, dynamic relationships and scenes that crackle with tension and possibility." — Memphis Commercial Appeal
"Set in the fictional town of Mercury, Mississippi, The Heaven of Mercury offers us necrophilia, murder, a talking cat, strange goings-on with an excised human heart and a number of ghostly apparitions. Yet it encompasses far more than this; and what might have been mere gothic extravaganza becomes, in the hands of this gifted writer, a subtle and moving meditation on the themes of continuity and impermanence, love and loss." — Independent
"[A]n unforgettable story…The accidents, the disappointments, the corrections, and the secrets each life contains are woven into a deeply sympathetic portrait of small town life at its worst and best." — The Advocate
"Gimcrack storytelling...grounded by generous humanity." — Entertainment Weekly
"[Watson's] work may remind readers of William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, or Flanner O'Connor, but has a power—and a charm—all its own." — Merle Rubin, Baltimore Sun
"A vivid mythology of a small Southern town that moves to a strange, electrifying beat." — Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Watson imbues his work with an elegance that sets it apart from the rest." — Boston Herald
"Sort of a calm wail. Each page a deep pleasure. A book at life’s pace yet somehow without any of its tedium. Only the Irish geniuses wrote like this." — Barry Hannah, author of Airships
"The Heaven of Mercury is a tragicomic story of missed opportunities and unjust necessities that wittily explores the souls of its highly colorful cast of characters. It is suffused with an almost savage lyricism that illumines every accurate detail and nuance of place and speech. The light this novel casts is so brilliant it makes even its own shadows luminous. Brad Watson has struck a fresh and thrilling note." — Fred Chappell, author of Dagon
"The best thing to come out of the South since A Confederacy of Dunces." — Gregory Rabassa, translator of One Hundred Years of Solitude
"Vividly peopled, full of surprises, The Heaven of Mercury is a deeply satisfying novel." — Margot Livesey, author of The Boy in the Field
"As mythic and miraculous as Faulkner and Marquez. Amazingly original, and a sublime delight for the lucky readers who get their hands on it. A novel so fine you don’t want it to ever end." — Larry Brown, author of Father and Son
"Watson traces a dark but resonant journey through the world of the Southern gothic in his bleak, touching debut novel…" — Publishers Weekly
"A seamless interweaving of narrative, remembrance, dreaming, and fantasy unifies a wealth of colorful tragicomic material—in a superb first novel by the Alabama storywriter." — Kirkus Reviews
"A fast-paced, myth-echoing, tragic-comic commentary on our modern lives." — Bookpage
Awards
Shortlisted — National Book Award, 2002