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The critics love
Until the Dawn
A PAGE-TURNER WITH POETRY
DISGUISED AS PROSE
Review by Linda Delayen for amazon.com, February 10, 2001
The focal point of this amazing
first novel is Travis "Red" Warner, the
larger-than-life artist who hailed from Tupelo, Mississippi, a town that
spawned the other larger-than-life artist, Elvis Presley. Alec Clayton's
narrator is Travis' childhood friend Johnny Lewis. He takes us back in time
to Mississippi 1919 to introduce us to Travis' grandparents, then his
parents and finally tells the story of Travis growing up in Tupelo. Clayton
does a masterful job evoking the cadences of speech and the overweening
racial and social status bigotry of the place and time. "Red" Warner's
nickname could have just as easily come from his burning passion for his art
as from his flaming hair color. In 1970s New York art scene, Red became the
darling of the critics, and when that fickle adulation ceased, he flamed out
big time and disappeared. Johnny Lewis sets out to find him, and what he
finds is...well, read it for yourself! There are times when Clayton's prose
becomes pure poetry. This is an author with great potential. I look forward
to his next!
ONE GOOD READ!
Review by Lawrence Johnson for amazon.com, February 3, 2001
Alec Clayton's Until The Dawn is indeed a wise, wonderful, gritty and honest
book. A masterful visual artist himself, Clayton knows how to put pictures
in words as well, and along with treating the reader to a moving canvas that
encompasses the South of the depression and the sixties, shows us the
hardass, cutthroat, coke-snorting art world of New York City in the 1980s.
One example will show how good this book is as the reader sees Clayton's
sexually-confused artist hero attempting "to find an abstract form that
spoke of the faded, Army green aura of alcoholics sleeping on the sidewalks,
ashen faces and dull, boozy-pink rims around whitened eyes." This is the
real thing. Readers should grab it immediately and enjoy!
STUNNING DEBUT NOVEL BY A WISE NEW VOICE IN AMERICAN FICTION
Review by Dave Gantt for amazon.com
Alec Clayton's skillfully-written and highly-entertaining first novel will
make you very anxious to see what he will write next.
"Until the Dawn" alternates between very different places (primarily Tupelo,
Mississippi, and New York City) and times (early to late 20th century),
piecing together a fascinating and gritty story of the art world. As an
artist, a Southerner, and a former New Yorker, Clayton knows these worlds
well. But what makes this book special is the...well...FEROCITY with which
it is written. It is incredibly evocative, at times shocking and at times
charming and beautiful - and it all rings true.
Clayton attacks our society's foolish and tragic ills (including racism and
homophobia) head-on in a richly politically-incorrect manner. It is a
wonderful debut novel by a wise new voice in American fiction. As a
librarian, I can assure all librarians that many a library patron will be
delighted if you add this to your shelves.
Truth about subjects many people fear: GREAT READ!,
Review by Bob Appleton for amazon.com,
Normally I don't get emotional about books that are strange to me. This read
was different. Clayton is an excellent writer and has a way of pulling at
your heart-strings. Touching, moving, and a must read in today's society.
Robert M. Appleton, Jr. (author of Running Out Of Road)
I felt this book. I don't feel prose this way often!
Review by Robert Appleton, Jr. author of Running Out Of Road
Alec Clayton is a master writer. He takes us into places that we would not
have experienced without his prose. I read this one fast, and now I realize
that I MUST read it again! IT'S just that kind of book: you can't eat all
this good food at the table in one seating.
Much like a ride on a high speed train...
Review by Lisa Cyr, Buzz24.com
In what ways do the lives of our ancestors influence the direction and focus
of our own lives? What forces during your lifetime helped push you along
your path? The quest for answering these types of questions may be assisted
by the creative efforts of Olympian author, artist and publisher Alec
Clayton as he explores the roots of artistic expression in his novel, Until
the Dawn.
Alec's 30+ years of personal artistic experience has given him the energy
and know-how to imagine and convey the motivations of a creative genius such
as the story's central character, the chaotic art-star, Travis "Red" Warner.
A childhood friend, Johnny Lewis, leads us through most Red's enigmatic life
while exploring his own intertwined relationships.
Until the Dawn plows through the time both before and during Red's colorful
and tumultuous existence much like a ride on a high speed train hopping
between segregated Mississippi of the 1960's and modern day New York City.
Alec's frank exploration of human themes such as sexuality and racism keep
the reader engaged and enthusiastic while wanting even more.
PAIN, BEAUTY AND WONDERMENT
Review by Larry Johnson for Southern Quarterly, December 2002
In 1982 a legendary, hardliving artist vanishes from the glitzy,
coke-infused New York art scene after a violent and bloody
self-confrontation at a party in honor of his new exhibition. This is Travis
"Red" Warner, ambivalent genius, who has taken New York by storm after
appearing out of the rustic depths of Tupelo, Mississippi. But then that
same rural hamlet produced Elvis Presley, so why not? To discover the whys
and hows in this tale is the work of Johnny Lewis, childhood friend of
Travis, who narrates most of the story through a familial investigation
going back to1919 and taking in some of the major events of the twentieth
century as reflected by Travis' forebears and himself. Johnny is obsessed
with Travis because he has been attracted to him all his life; he is
obsessed with Red Warner because of his artistic talent, and he wants to
know what turned the earlier incarnation into the later. Calling most of the
artists he knows "effete wimps," Red Warner says "They don't know that
painting doesn't come from the eye and the hand; it comes from the gut and
farther down. They don't know that the seat of art is a hard dick." Johnny
Lewis understands this fully, however. He sees Warner as "the last of the
agonized geniuses," and, comfortable with his own homosexuality, knows that
his old friend has fought a battle all his life to come to terms with the
same urges, which would seem to go against the instincts of the Travis
Warner we see in his high school days as a football hero and womanizer.
Tracking Red Warner down and discovering his elder kin's histories is a
problematic road trip of self-discovery for Johnny Lewis as well. In good
time, though, as the narrator examines the Warner family's past, their
adoption into their midst of Travis' mother, her various battles with
Travis' renegade father, Travis' relationship with his "sister" Cassie, and
the southern ferment of the fifties and early sixties, all seems to flow
understandably into a union of manifestations that perfects the novel's plot
and gives the reader a sense of grace under tension. Blooming bodily
desires, racism, and rock and roll take their turns enlivening the plot, yet
the writer's primary concern is to focus on the growth of an artistic
imagination in such fertile ground.
In other words, Alec Clayton, native of Tupelo, Mississippi, and stunning
visual artist in oil and canvas himself, has given us an excellent first
novel that holds the mirror up to a Southern past many of us have lived
through but is never clichéd. It also shows a New York art scene that
Clayton himself witnessed in the early eighties and which his character Red
Warner values as a terrible release, allowing him to come to terms with his
own sexuality while trying "to build skeins of paint like the layered grit
of shopping bag ladies with their many coats, to find an abstract form that
spoke of the faded, Army green aura of alcoholics sleeping on the sidewalks,
ashen faces and dull, boozy-pink rims around whitened eyes." Yes, those
words inculcate the genius of Travis "Red" Warner, and the novel Until the
Dawn makes that genius achingly clear for us, in all its pain, beauty, and
wonderment. Therefore, one should fly to the nearest bookstore or computer
screen to order it.
Which brings up the fact that Until the Dawn is an example of that new kind
of book, the "electronic book" or "print on demand" work. One might
naturally ask what it looks like, how well it's put together, etc. Is it a
"real" book? Is its literary quality imaged in the format? The answer to
these last two questions is a resounding yes! This is a trade paperback book
and it looks as good as any other trade paperback published by any major
publishing house. The cover contains a beautiful color photograph, the
author's photograph appears on the back, the print is excellent and well
defined on good paper and there are very few typographical errors. All that
and the fact that this work never has to go out of print and can be ordered
online or at any bookstore make for the wave of the future. Doubtless there
will be many more works of inferior quality published in the "print on
demand" format than books like Until the Dawn, but when was it ever any
different with the major houses? Too many wretched novels are published
every year while superior works like this one are rejected, and this
reviewer therefore champions the "electronic book" as a long-needed remedy
for the situation. Congratulations to Xlibris for their vision and
congratulations to Alec Clayton for his powerful, gutsy, and honest novel.
Is this a "real" book? Hell yes—and then some!
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