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Auraria: A Novel Kindle Edition
"Holtzclaw hadn't heard of Auraria until his employer sent him to destroy it..."
Shimmery mystery and spirits, humble monsters, singing trees and vengeful fish in the 19th-century north Georgia mountains
"Fact and fancy are intertwined cleverly and seamlessly in a top-notch, thoroughly American fantasy." Publishers Weekly, starred review
Water spirits, moon maidens, haunted pianos, headless revenants, and an invincible terrapin that lives under the mountains. None of these distract James Holtzclaw from his employer's mission: to turn the fading gold-rush town of Auraria, GA, into a first-class resort and drown its fortunes below a man-made lake.
But when Auraria's peculiar people and problematic ghosts collide with his own rival ambitions, Holtzclaw must decide what he will save and what will be washed away.
Taking its inspiration from a real Georgia ghost town, Auraria is steeped in the folklore of the Southern Appalachians, where the tensions of natural, supernatural and artificial are still alive.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date10 July 2012
- File size2306 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B008AM5KGE
- Publisher : QW Publishers, LLC (10 July 2012)
- Language : English
- File size : 2306 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 388 pages
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I’m Tim Westover, (1982 - ?). I’m not a native Southerner – no accent, no family roots here. I’m Southern now through exposure and exploration and no small amount of good luck.
I was born in Rhode Island, and my family moved to Tennessee and then to London, England. We moved to Georgia when I was in high school. I graduated from Central Gwinnett High School in Lawrenceville, GA, and then went to Davidson College in North Carolina and the University of Georgia. I traveled for volunteer work and language studies, going to Russia, Iceland, Germany, Croatia, Cuba, and all over the United States.
But after all that, I came back to Lawrenceville. Today, it’s an Atlanta suburb, filled with chain restaurants and Interstate traffic. Right in the middle, there’s a pretty square with an old brick courthouse. Going on walks during my lunch break, I’d read the historic signs, and I learned that under the pavement, there’s a lot of history and tall tales. The present courthouse is actually the third one on the site: the first one burned in 1871, and the second one was so poorly constructed they tore it down in 1884. Lawrenceville used to be on the frontier of Cherokee territory; important trials and debates in the tragedy of the Trail of Tears happened here. There’s gold in the river and, tucked between subdivisions, there’s a line of mounds that might be in the shape of a giant serpent. Citizens protested puddles on the dirt roads by casting their fishing lines into them. Oak trees cast their shade on crumbling stone horse troughs. Men and women swapped horses and gossip and listened to the patent medicine sellers on Honest Alley. Mrs. Maltbie took her whacking cane and smashed up the saloon that sold her son one too many drinks.
Back in the day, Lawrenceville built a low black fence around its square because they’d leave the doors open on hot days, and pigs would wander into the courtroom and cause a ruckus. There’s a legend that anyone who sits and takes a rest on that fence will never leave Lawrenceville. I decided to sit down.
I learned how to make biscuits – we didn’t have a family recipe, so I had to start one. I’ve shoveled dead possums off my driveway. I taught myself to play the clawhammer banjo. I’ve met the mule that turns the wheel that grinds my favorite brand of grits (Red Mule Grits, the mule’s name is Luke). I say “y’all” unironically.
On the weekends, I drive to other little Georgia towns. Each one has a history just as rich as Lawrenceville’s. Some only exist as historic markers now, or as ghosts. A pile of stones in a traffic median north of Dahlonega is the grave of an Indian princess, Trahlyta, who drank from a fountain of youth but died when she was captured by rival warrior and carried away from her land. Outside of Winder was a boiling lake of mud that was known as “Cherokee Hell” until it exploded one day in the 1800s. A giant invincible turtle lived in the caves in the mountains; settlers knew they couldn’t kill it, but they kept throwing rocks and stones until it retreated in annoyance to depths unknown.
I tell people that I don’t make up anything that I write. Generations before me have already found the best stories. I collect what I can from old folks, young folks, museums, signs, pamphlets, and old newspaper articles. And I tie them up with a little narrative to save as many of the old stories as I can.
I’ve worked for a small medical software company in Lawrenceville for over twenty years. I live in Grayson, GA. From our back porch, we can look down to Big Haynes Creek and a place called Hope Hollow, where the Winter sisters may once have lived. I didn’t make them up. I think they’ve always been here.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from other countries

The author's imagination often had me wondering if he had smoked something or had too many magic mushrooms along the way, but the book was too well written for that. I could hardly wait to read what kind of crazy thing would happen next. I was not disappointed! It seemed like a let down to me at first, but turned out to be a much better read than I anticipated.
If you are expecting history, well, there is a little in here sprinkled in. The place is real, the gold rush is real, but this book is not a good source of anything of historical value if you are looking at northwest GA. Just settle back for a crazy ride.



The town of Auraria has long lay hidden in the Georgia mountains, notable for its gold deposits and the strange phenomena that haunt the town -- singing trees, moon maidens who bathe in the springs, wild wonder fish that swim through the mists of the waterfalls, rains of peaches, and other fantastic happenings. James Holtzclaw, assistant to business tycoon Shadburn, has no eye for these wonders and simply hopes to purchase the town for his employer. But the mystic forces in Auraria have their own agenda, and Holtclaw has to wonder just what his employer hopes to accomplish in this town... and what the locals are plotting as well.
"Auraria" is a fairly slow-moving novel, taking its sweet time and meandering from point to point. There were plenty of times when the machinations of both humans and supernatural forces seemed too complex and muddied to follow very well. And to be honest, many of the characters were fairly flat beyond one or two personality traits. It's hard to care about the fates of characters when there's little there to get invested in.
But despite all this... this novel was just gorgeously written, littered with marvels and wonders and seamlessly melding fantasy with history, giving us a tale grounded in reality but with the feel of a folk tale. And the novel has some valuable things to say as well about humanity's inability to appreciate wonders, how worth and value are largely in the eye of the beholder, and finding happiness in everyday life instead of wild dreams. It's an entrancing and magical story, and for that I can forgive the meandering plot and the one-note characters.
"Auraria" is an enchanting novel, and well worth a read. Much like the wonder of the town of Auraria are disguised by the dreary look of the small town, "Auraria" is a book of gentle wonder disguised under its plain cover.