Michael Farris Smith is an American writer from Mississippi. As of 2023, Smith has published seven novels: The Hands of Strangers (2011), Rivers (2013), Desperation Road (2017), The Fighter (2018), Blackwood (2020), Nick (2021), and Salvage This World (2023).
In early 2011, Smith's debut work, The Hands of Strangers, was published by the Mint Hill Books imprint of the Charlotte-based publisher Main Street Rag Publishing.[6] It is a novella set in Paris and focuses on Jon and Estelle, whose nine-year-old daughter Jennifer is kidnapped during a class field trip at the Musée d'Orsay.[7] In its starred review, Publishers Weekly wrote, "Smith captures the essence of the helpless, making more of an impact than most novels three times its size."[8]
Rivers (2013)
In September 2013, Smith's first full-length novel, Rivers, was published by Simon & Schuster.[9]Rivers is set in post-Hurricane Katrina Mississippi in the distant future as a series of violent storms devastate the state's southern Gulf Coast. It has been described both as post-apocalyptic fiction and dystopian fiction.[3][10] In its starred review, Kirkus Reviews praised Smith's "expertly executed" example of a post-apocalyptic society and the novel's "compelling" plot; the publication also called Smith's prose "lush, descriptive and even beautiful."[10] In her review for The Washington Post, novelist Mary Doria Russell praised Smith's realistic character development and his "honed prose" for building tension. Russell, however, criticized the novel for being too short and called its ending a "surprising disappointment."[11]The New York Times praised Smith's "incantatory prose" for powering the narrative.[12]
Smith's third novel, Desperation Road, was published in February 2017 by Lee Boudreaux Books, an imprint of Little, Brown and Company.[14][15] Set in Mississippi, it follows Russell Gaines, who is released from Mississippi State Penitentiary after serving an eleven-year sentence. As he travels back to his hometown of McComb, his path intertwines with that of Maben Jones. Jones, a homeless woman and former addict, is searching for a life for her and her young daughter Annalee. When a deputy sheriff attempts to rape Maben, she shoots and kills him.[16][17] In its starred review, Kirkus Reviews wrote, "Smith writes shapely prose and sharp dialogue and everywhere displays an acute sense of the moments and pain that can define lives in a small town."[18]
Smith's sixth novel, Nick, was published on January 5, 2021 by Little, Brown and Company.[30] It is a prequel to The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald's landmark 1925 novel. The Great Gatsby's U.S. copyright expired on January 1, 2021, when all works published in 1925 entered the public domain in the United States.[31]Nick centers on the narrator of The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway, in the years before the events of Fitzgerald's novel. It follows Nick Carraway as a soldier in World War I, his detours in Paris, and his time in New Orleans before his move up to Long Island.[32][33]Kirkus Reviews called Nick a "compelling character study."[32] In his review for The New York Times, Ben Fountain called it an "exemplary novel" with a "classic American sound" and praised Smith's unique rendering of Nick Carraway.[34]Publishers Weekly praised the "striking imagery" of the war chapters, but felt the novel ultimately did not provide any deeper understand of Nick Carraway.[33] The Los Angeles Times agreed, criticizing the novel as devolving into a melodrama and reprocessing Nick Carraway rather than clarifying his character.[35]Ron Charles of The Washington Post felt the novel failed to expand on the original story, and criticized its second half for withdrawing Nick's perspective too far and leaving readers with "noir caricatures and their lurid spat."[36]
Salvage This World (2023)
Smith's seventh novel, Salvage This World, was published on April 23, 2023, by Little, Brown and Company.[37] The book is set in an uncertain time in the future when the Mississippi Gulf Coast has become all but uninhabitable because of the effects of climate change. The Gulf hurricane season, once confined to the period of June through November, now never ends. The novel follows Jessie, a young mother, and her child, as they come home to see her ghost-haunted father, Wade. Jobs are few and resources fewer. The Gulf Coast's remaining inhabitants are primarily people who are too poor to leave and grifters who come to prey on them. One of those grifters is Elser, a con woman who leads a traveling tent revival she has dubbed the Temple of Pain and Glory. In his review for The New York Times, John Brandon said the book portrays a "a Deep South where hospitality feels impossible, from which everyone with means and sense has departed, a society where any vehicle on the road might have a bound (if alive) or bagged (if dead) human as its cargo."[38]
Short fiction
Smith's short fiction has twice been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.[5]