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The Kings of Big Spring: Book summary and reviews of The Kings of Big Spring by Bryan Mealer

The Kings of Big Spring

God, Oil, and One Family's Search for the American Dream

by Bryan Mealer

The Kings of Big Spring by Bryan Mealer X
The Kings of Big Spring by Bryan Mealer
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  • Published Feb 2018
    384 pages
    Genre: Biography/Memoir

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Book Summary

A saga of family, fortune, faith in Texas, where blood is bond and oil is king.

In 1892, Bryan Mealer's great-grandfather leaves the Georgia mountains and heads west into Texas, looking for wealth and adventure in the raw and open country. But his luck soon runs out. Beset by drought, the family loses their farm just as the dead pastures around them give way to one of the biggest oil booms in American history. They eventually settle in the small town of Big Spring, where fast fortunes are being made from its own reserves of oil. For the next two generations, the Mealers live on the margins of poverty, laboring in the cotton fields and on the drilling rigs that sprout along the flatland, weathering dust and wind, booms and busts, and tragedies that scatter them like tumbleweed. After embracing Pentecostalism during the Great Depression, they rely heavily on their faith to steel them against hardship and despair. But for young Bobby Mealer, the author's father, religion is only an agent for rebellion.

In the winter of 1981, when the author is seven years old, Bobby receives a call from an old friend with a simple question, "How'd you like to be a millionaire?"

Twenty-six, and with a wife and three kids, Bobby had left his hometown to seek a life removed from the blowing dust and oil fields, and to find spiritual peace. But now Big Spring's streets are flooded again with roughnecks, money, and sin. Boom chasers pour in from the busted factory towns in the north. Drilling rigs rise like timber along the pastures, and poor men become millionaires overnight.

Grady Cunningham, Bobby's friend, is one of the newly-minted kings of Big Spring. Loud and flamboyant, with a penchant for floor-length fur coats, Grady pulls Bobby and his young wife into his glamorous orbit. While drilling wells for Grady's oil company, they fly around on private jets and embrace the honky-tonk high life of Texas oilmen. But beneath the Rolexes and Rolls Royce cars is a reality as dark as the crude itself. As Bobby soon discovers, his return to Big Spring is a backslider's journey into a spiritual wilderness, and one that could cost him his life.

A masterwork of memoir and narrative history, The Kings of Big Spring is an indelible portrait of fortune and ruin as big as Texas itself. And in telling the story of four generations of his family, Mealer also tells the story of America came to be.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"Starred Review. Mealer's narrative allows figures long frozen in black and white to walk again in living color." - Publishers Weekly

"Think of it as a Texas version of Hillbilly Elegy." - Bryan Burrough, New York Times bestselling author of The Big Rich and Barbarians At The Gate

"Bryan Mealer has given us a brilliant, and brilliantly entertaining, portrayal of family, and a bursting-at-the-seams chunk of America in the bargain." - Ben Fountain, bestselling author of Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk

This information about The Kings of Big Spring was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

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Author Information

Bryan Mealer

Bryan Mealer is the author of Muck City and the New York Times bestseller The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind – written with William Kamkwamba – which has been translated into more than a dozen languages and will soon be released as a major motion picture. He's also the author of All Things Must Fight to Live,which chronicled his time covering the war in the Democratic Republic of Congofor the Associated Press and Harper's. His other work has appeared in Texas Monthly, Esquire, the The Guardian, and the New York Times. Mealer and his family live in Austin.

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