Andy Wilkinson has written an honest to god West Texas Panhandle Classic. Surprise, Texas is a big wondrous novel full of sprawling generational tales of complex human desire and circumstance gone amuck, kind of amuck, not so amuck and out of the muck. It’s a true versatility.
Thom Ed, the bean spilling narrator, spills out words in such giant booming voice you might confuse everything he says with pure crooked fiction...unless, of course, you just happen to have been spawned from and raised among such an eccentric clutch of wild savage souls yourself and know for sure that this is also the absolute hand-on-the-bible truth...even at its most extravagant points of black-tongued exaggeration.
The language is old style rich, pitch-perfect and hilarious. Moving full throttle across the tongue and rolling sweet into the ear in that unique way that makes reading it out loud an essential gift to yourself...and anyone else listening! If Mark Twain was still around, I’m sure he’d find great kinship with the fine tuned language and bountiful stories that inhabit this novel. He’d also laugh his ass off.
Reading Surprise, Texas is a great adventure and the very best kind of surprise.
-Terry Allen, artist, musician, writer
This is a book for lovers--lovers of language, music, musical language, history, and the absurd. Lovers of anarchy, ukuleles, Texas, surprises, and the elusive. It is for lovers of poetry and prose, alliteration and consonance, for lovers of logic and mathematics, clowns and cookies, literature and love stories, Venn diagrams and independent bookstores. And Elvis. Be warned, however. It will ruin the reader for reading silently. Rather, readers will find themselves reading ecstatically aloud to anyone who will listen, just to taste the story and the language on their tongues. No, Surprise is not like any other book you have ever read. And that is a good thing.
-Amy Auker, writer
All that was good and wholesome and unique about Surprise was owed to its home-grown anarchists," Thom Ed declares by way of introduction to the characters of this Texas town, characters whose lives intersect at the crossroads of philosophy and practice. Is it any surprise that these communal anarchists follow their own paths on the unmarked map of Live, Laugh, and Love? Joie de vivre!
Deb Carpenter-Nolting, author, songwriter, performance artist, teacher
Surprise, Texas, a euphoric, exotic, existential excursion from coast to coast (and beyond) but firmly rooted in the talcum-dry greasewood and cholla of table-flat West Texas. Full of surprises and Joneses.
-Barry Corbin, actor and writer
Andy Wilkinson has written about a fictional place called Surprise, Texas. However, it is as real as a Stetson hat and as true to the land and people of this West Texas country as a perfectly-cut diamond. Read it and tell your friends.
-Max Evans, novelist and painter