It's Not Like I Knew Her

Jodie Taylor's childhood is filled with loss, abuse, chronic disappointment, and an instinctive awareness that her desire for women will forever make her an outcast. At 18, she flees her home town in rural north Florida and arrives in racially charged Selma, Alabama in 1956 as a penniless fugitive.She finds work in a caf�© that is frequented by racist nightriders and, with an eye on the door, she hunkers down behind a wall of lies and half-truths. Her self-imposed silence with the family she left behind is broken when a crisis sets Jodie on a backward journey. As she struggles to reconcile her past with the present, she begins the inward journey she must take to truly find her home.

". . . one of the most deeply felt novels I have read in a long time. Jodie Taylor is an unforgettable character. Her at times gut-wrenching journey of self-discovery and truth is a tale for the ages. Pat Spears is a rare writer. She peers into the heart of darkness and finds redemption. Read this book."--Connie May Fowler, author of How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly and Before Women had Wings

". . . Rarely have I been so taken by a character in a novel as I have been by the stubborn, broken, generous Jodie Taylor "--Sally Bellerose, author of The Girls Club

"Despite the novel's thematic gravity, which includes discrimination and alienation based on sexual orientation, gender, race, and poverty, it has a sharp, sometimes irreverent tone that punctuates the tension in just the right places."--Amanda Silva, essayist

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It's Not Like I Knew Her

Jodie Taylor's childhood is filled with loss, abuse, chronic disappointment, and an instinctive awareness that her desire for women will forever make her an outcast. At 18, she flees her home town in rural north Florida and arrives in racially charged Selma, Alabama in 1956 as a penniless fugitive.She finds work in a caf�© that is frequented by racist nightriders and, with an eye on the door, she hunkers down behind a wall of lies and half-truths. Her self-imposed silence with the family she left behind is broken when a crisis sets Jodie on a backward journey. As she struggles to reconcile her past with the present, she begins the inward journey she must take to truly find her home.

". . . one of the most deeply felt novels I have read in a long time. Jodie Taylor is an unforgettable character. Her at times gut-wrenching journey of self-discovery and truth is a tale for the ages. Pat Spears is a rare writer. She peers into the heart of darkness and finds redemption. Read this book."--Connie May Fowler, author of How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly and Before Women had Wings

". . . Rarely have I been so taken by a character in a novel as I have been by the stubborn, broken, generous Jodie Taylor "--Sally Bellerose, author of The Girls Club

"Despite the novel's thematic gravity, which includes discrimination and alienation based on sexual orientation, gender, race, and poverty, it has a sharp, sometimes irreverent tone that punctuates the tension in just the right places."--Amanda Silva, essayist

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It's Not Like I Knew Her

It's Not Like I Knew Her

by Pat Spears
It's Not Like I Knew Her

It's Not Like I Knew Her

by Pat Spears

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Overview

Jodie Taylor's childhood is filled with loss, abuse, chronic disappointment, and an instinctive awareness that her desire for women will forever make her an outcast. At 18, she flees her home town in rural north Florida and arrives in racially charged Selma, Alabama in 1956 as a penniless fugitive.She finds work in a caf�© that is frequented by racist nightriders and, with an eye on the door, she hunkers down behind a wall of lies and half-truths. Her self-imposed silence with the family she left behind is broken when a crisis sets Jodie on a backward journey. As she struggles to reconcile her past with the present, she begins the inward journey she must take to truly find her home.

". . . one of the most deeply felt novels I have read in a long time. Jodie Taylor is an unforgettable character. Her at times gut-wrenching journey of self-discovery and truth is a tale for the ages. Pat Spears is a rare writer. She peers into the heart of darkness and finds redemption. Read this book."--Connie May Fowler, author of How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly and Before Women had Wings

". . . Rarely have I been so taken by a character in a novel as I have been by the stubborn, broken, generous Jodie Taylor "--Sally Bellerose, author of The Girls Club

"Despite the novel's thematic gravity, which includes discrimination and alienation based on sexual orientation, gender, race, and poverty, it has a sharp, sometimes irreverent tone that punctuates the tension in just the right places."--Amanda Silva, essayist


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781940189130
Publisher: Twisted Road Publications, LLC
Publication date: 06/17/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 2 MB

About the Author


Pat Spears is the author of two novels; DREAM CHASER (Twisted Road Publications, 2014) and IT'S NOT LIKE I KNEW HER (Twisted Road Publications, 2016). Her short stories have appeared in numerous journals, including the North American Review, Appalachian Heritage, Seven Hills Review, and anthologies titled Law and Disorder from Main Street Rag, Bridges and Borders from Jane's Stories Press and Saints and Sinners: New Fiction from the Festival, 2012. Her short story Stranger At My Door received honorable mention in the 2013 Lorian Hemingway Short Story competition and Whelping was a finalist for the Rash Award and appears in the 2014 issue of Broad River Review. She is a sixth generation Floridian and lives in Tallahassee, Florida.
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