Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
Alexander Watson
Author
River Queens: Saucy boat, stout mates, spotted dog, America
Two men launch across the American Heartland from Texas to Ohio in a vintage motor yacht. The America they find is one few know exists.

Semi Finalist

Plot/Idea: 10 out of 10
Originality: 10 out of 10
Prose: 10 out of 10
Character/Execution: 10 out of 10
Overall: 10.00 out of 10

Assessment:

Idea/Concept: Watson offers a vibrant, unexpected, and abundantly satisfying travelogue that chronicles his year spent traveling America’s waterways aboard a dilapidated 1950s yacht with his partner, Dale, and their beloved rescue dog.

Prose: Watson's writing is robust and well-defined, effectively supporting the book’s thinner narrative structure. Sparkling detail, profound insight, and lively dramatization, allows this work to shine.

Originality: Stories of mid-life journeys are frequent memoir subjects. Watson's tremendous talent brings the story of an unconventional adventure to life. Watson's work demonstrates loving attention to detail, an ear for dialogue, and a seasoned storytelling style.

Execution: Humorous, pensive, and often poignant, this memoir offers a smart and soulful account of a singular voyage into the American south, with memorable characterizations and pitch-perfect prose.

Date Submitted: January 28, 2020

Reviews
Watson’s delightful memoir recounts how he and his partner, Dale—both real estate investors—bought a fixer-upper 1950s wooden Chris-Craft boat for $14,500 and sailed it from Oklahoma to Ohio. They began by overhauling the boat inside and out; after two years, it was finally seaworthy, and they traveled along various rivers (with an overland tow from the Arkansas River in Little Rock to the Tennessee River) to their Cincinnati home. Watson and Dale—the River Queens of the title—have an enjoyable banter throughout, arguing who’s going to take the dog for a walk or how to signal for help when their boat breaks down, but it’s really the folks they meet along the way who steal the show: Alon, an aging mechanic who assists the men in the boat’s restoration; John Bartlett, a crazy Cajun captain the likes of which “one does not meet in Grandmother’s living room”; and a smattering of river rats, retirees, and good old boys. No matter who they encounter, the two gay city slickers and their dog charm and impress with their beautiful boat and their love of the “muddy water” that runs through their veins. This is a heartwarming look into the heart of America. (BookLife)
Amy's Bookshelf Reviews blog

4 Stars

 

Grand adventure

 

Life took the author and his partner in a direction they never planned on, but it was a grand adventure, indeed. Through travel and the love they have for each other, the couple took on new adventures in life. I enjoyed reading about their excursion and journeys. The story is written in present tense which adds to its charm. It brings the reader along the journey with Dale and Alexander. There is a part that sticks with me, and it's just something that Dale says to his mother. "Home is where Alexander is." I found this story inviting, and well told.

Jason Brown

It has been a while since I enjoyed a book as much as this. A biography that reads like fiction and has such vivid text it is actually painful to have to put the book down. Official sale date is Monday 10/01/18 

[author's note: Official sale date is updated to: 10/17/2018]

Stephanie Alford

Alexander Watson's writing is elegant, and the story of River Queens is so compelling I'm having a hard time finding my objectivity.  I want to write a fair review without seeming to shill for him.  But damn this book was good.  It's one of the better ones I've read over the summer.

The book releases mid-October, they haven't even gotten this one out yet and I'm already asking what he's working on next.  That's how much I want him to succeed and keep writing great books so I can keep reading them.

Ahem ....

When I was in 6th grade, my family lived in Hannibal, MO.  The three things which stand out in my mind all these decades later are the mannequin of Becky Thatcher with ankle long blonde braids, the address at which we lived, and the Mississip'.

We were a nomadic family and so were only in Hannibal for one school year.  But the impression that big brown river made on me stays, and makes me homesick for a place I've overly romanticized in my childhood memories.

Which is to say, I can relate in some small way to the call of the river.  And that is what Alexander and Dale,  their spotted dog Doris Faye, and a left for dead 1955  forty-five foot Chris-Craft Corsair answer.

It starts in Texas where Alexander finds the wooden yacht, and ends with a refurbished beauty which they sail to Betty Jane's home berth in Cleveland.

I was smitten pretty early on.  A gay couple is gonna fix up their boat and sail it into unknown territory.  In the South.  They are going to sail right into the belly of unallayed bigotry, and count on the kindness of strangers to help them along the way.

I knew it was going to be good when Watson relates the story of finding The King & I (later renamed Betty Jane).  The man who handles the transaction for the boat tells them, "They think wood boats just sink or break apart ... for no reason.  That's bull.  They fail 'cause somebody quit lovin' 'em."

This is a hard life they're putting themselves into, and it becomes apparent they have enough love for all concerned.  Alexander and Dale go into this knowing it's going to be one of the hardest things they've ever done, and they do it anyway.  And they keep doing it, even when it gets harder than anyone could have expected.

Watson does not sugar coat anything.  Nor does he dwell on the difficulties.  He writes about it all.  And there are some heartbreaking moments in this book.

Awkward's in there too.  One that had I been within earshot, I'm not sure I could have looked either of them in the eye afterwards.  Watson doesn't flinch in the telling.  Their loud argument has a good reason to be in the story, it's not there as some sort of nod to, "See?  We're just like straight couples, we argue too."  Nothing in this book is done to make anyone feel Alexander and Dale are other than what they are.

And they are two men who love each other fiercely and work together to rebuild this boat and fulfill their dream.  The people they meet along the way, for the most part, are polite and helpful.  River folk in the South are friendly and say, "See ya down the river."

Even when they question what two ho-mo-sex-u-als are doing in their river.  And there are several encounters that make me wince for the state of grace which cannot allow people to just be people.

Gods and goddesses what adventures these two have.  It makes me want to pay for adult beverages while they regale me with tales and tell me how they got through heartbreaking death, horrifying weather, and the sweltering humidity of life on a boat on a river.

There's not a whole lot wrong with the way this book is written.  It's elegant in a way that so few books these days are.  It's evident Watson worked hard, and lovingly, on River Queens, but it doesn't read like hard work at all.  It reads smoothly, like a lazy day on the river when all is right with the world.

I am grateful Alexander Watson reached out to me and asked I read his book.  And I look forward to reading more of his writing as it becomes available.  The country could use a few more gentlemanly intrepid travelers.

Stephanie Alford

www.lunisea.com

 

Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2018
  • 978-1939710-857
  • 320 pages
  • $27.95
ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...