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- BOOKS, Page 67Truth Potion
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- SLOW POISON
- By Sheila Bosworth
- Knopf; 322 pages; $21
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- Do Southern writers have longer memories than other
- people, or does it only seem that way? In her second novel,
- Sheila Bosworth, a New Orleans native, evokes her home state and
- its people with elegiac grace and gusts of humor. The
- combination goes down as smoothly as bourbon mixed with bitters
- and sugar, a drink that has "the transcendent blend of passion
- and troubles and sweet pity."
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- On a flight from Manhattan to Louisiana, Rory Cade
- recounts a family history that echoes the turbulent events of
- the '60s. The slow poison of the title is booze; it is also the
- ecstasy of love. Both are the straight stuff that delivers
- Rory's father to hell. After the mother of his three young
- daughters dies, he marries Aimee Desiree, a wild Creole beauty
- half his age. The marriage -- and the faithless Aimee Desiree
- -- is doomed. She meets her fate at 3 a.m. in a white
- Thunderbird hurtling along a narrow causeway across Lake
- Pontchartrain. The daughters never hear their father mention her
- again, but the moment of her passing envelopes each of them. The
- author understands a fundamental truth about Southerners: to
- them, she writes, "sweet and sad mean the same thing." Like an
- expert mixologist, Bosworth measures out life's sorrow in equal
- proportion to its sweetness.
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- By Emily Mitchell.
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