Louisiana Power & Light

Louisiana Power & Light by John Dufresne, published by W.W. Norton in 1994, is a first edition novel comprising 306 pages. Set in Monroe, Louisiana, the story introduces readers to a city rich in eccentricity, where the Fontana family has been a subject of fascination for generations. The narrative follows Billy Wayne Fontana, the last of his line, who abandons his priestly aspirations for a life with Earlene, a country music lyricist. The book captures the unique culture and humor of the region through its vivid characters and their intertwining lives.
Readers will encounter a diverse cast, including George Binwaddie, a motel owner with a messianic complex, and Angelo Candella, a Vietnam veteran navigating politics from a wheelchair. The story weaves themes of marriage, friendship, and the quest for salvation amidst the backdrop of Louisiana’s quirky charm. With its blend of humor and tragedy, Louisiana Power & Light offers a distinctive exploration of life in the South, showcasing Dufresne’s imaginative storytelling style.
Official synopsis Publisher
Welcome to Monroe, Louisiana, corrugated paper capital of the North Delta parishes, home of the Louisiana Passion Play and the Christian business weekly Prophet and Loss, a city whose library hosts a dysfunctional Great Books seminar, whose civil theater has produced a musical-comedy version of King Lear, and whose cypress tress have been known to drip snakes.
Folks here have been studying the genetically deficient Fontana family for generations, ever since Peregrine Fontana sloshed his way out of the swamp in 1840. Now it’s 1972 and Billy Wayne Fontana is the last survivor of this sorry familial line.
In this hilarious and wholly original tragi-comic romp you’ll meet Billy Wayne, who has been raised and groomed for the priesthood but who leaves his spiritual calling for Earlene, a sassy woman who writes country music lyrics at her kitchen table; George Binwaddie, a Pakistani messiah and motel owner who is driven to extraordinary acts of violence; Angelo Candella, a Vietnam hero and State House official who runs his office from a wheelchair; and Moon Pie Fontana, Billy Wayne’s offspring, a physically disabled child-star radio evangelist. Hold on, this is a wild and wacky ride through the Louisiana backwaters.
As quirky and imaginative as the best of John Irving, culled with the literary affects of Flannery O’Connor, Eudora Welty, and William Faulkner – all of whom Dufresne was compared to in reviews from his debut collection The Way That Water Enters Stone – this first novel about marriage, politics, friendship, love, and the quest for salvation will break your heart and make you laugh at the same time.
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