... filled with the rich and complex texture of the American South ... vividly imagined lives ... Told in hypnotic and at times sharp-witted prose, Some Go Home asks what land means to us, what we will do for that land and who we’ll become along the way. It’s a story of class and race intersections, of how the haves often send the have-nots to do their bidding. With racially motivated violence and scenes of animal cruelty, Some Go Home is often difficult to read as it reflects on trauma, war, family and how the sins and shortcomings of our ancestors replay in our own lives. It’s a relevant story that begs us to reconcile the past with the present so that we can finally begin to move forward.
Spanning decades of class wars and racial tension, Lindsey’s novel is nothing short of the South’s social history in miniature, a tangled but moving portrait of restoration.