© 2026 KWBU
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Likely Stories - Demon Copperhead

Hello. My name is Douglas Henry, Dean of the Honors College at Baylor University.

Last year, Barbara Kingsolver won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her novel, Demon Copperhead. Inspired by Charles Dickens' David Copperfield, Kingsolver lays bare the woeful lives of orphans in drug-addicted America.

Her setting isn't London, but southwest Virginia; her critical target isn't first wave industrialism, but big pharma. Think Purdue Pharma and oxycontin.

Narrated by the grownup title character, nicknamed Demon Copperhead, this novel is both brutal... and beautiful.

Demon is fatherless before he's born, caring for his addict mother by grade school, abused by his stepdad, and motherless by eleven. Assigned one social worker after another, and mistreated by cruel foster families, resilience and a few good souls help Demon survive. But unthinkable misfortune always awaits. About one calamity, he says "At the time, I thought my life couldn't get any worse. Here's some advice: Don't ever think that.”

The novel pulls no punches in depicting dehumanized children like Demon. You will weep at their plight and rage at their persecutors.

a book

Yet we know the story goes somewhere because Demon survives to tell it with honesty and perspective. Late on, he says, "I've tried... to pinpoint... where everything starts to fall apart.. But there's also the opposite, where some little nut cracks open inside you and a tree starts to grow." That tree's beauty-the miracle of Demon Copperhead-will bring you tears of joy.

Kingsolver is an artist. Her characters are deeply textured and multidimensional. She exquisitely paints Appalachian wildflowers, sunsets, and mountain vistas.

But this is not a novel for the Pollyanish or prudish. Tragically debauched lives, portrayed with R-rated realism, abound.

For whom is this heart-wrenching, award-winning novel? Kingsolver tells us: "For the kids who wake up hungry in those dark places every day, who've lost their families to poverty and pain pills, whose caseworkers keep losing their files, who feel invisible, or wish they were: this book is for you."

In these, the last words of Kingsolver's book, we catch a glimpse of the author's passion, her conviction, her sorrow, and her hope that we Americans might do better for children who are neglected and forgotten. Demon Copperhead is truly a fitting heir to David Copperfield. I hope you read this Pulitzer Prize-winner, feel its urgency, and do something about it!

RECENT EPISODES OF LIKELY STORIES
Likely Stories - The Colonel and the King: Tom Parker, Elvis Presley and the Partnership that Rocked the World by Peter Guralnick
‘The Colonel and the King: Tom Parker, Elvis Presley and the Partnership that Rocked the World’, sheds new light on the infamous Colonel Tom Parker and his sometimes questionable choices in managing Elvis Presley's career. I'm Kevin Tankersley, and this is likely stories on KWBU.
Likely Stories - A Case of Mice and Murder by Sally Smith
Welcome to this week’s installment of Likely Stories on KWBU. My name is Gia Chevis, and I confess that I watch what is probably an unhealthy number of cozy murder mystery shows, mainly British and British-adjacent. I am absolutely the target audience for A Case of Mice and Murder, the first novel in Sally Smith’s newish detective series.
Likely Stories - Thirst by Mary Oliver
In Thirst, Mary Oliver invites us into a quiet conversation between sorrow and faith, where nature and grace meet in every line.
Likely Stories - Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
A teen pilot, a hacker ex, a murderous mega-corp, and an AI that’s lost its moral compass. Illuminae is a fast-paced sci-fi thriller told through transcripts, files, and messages you won’t want to stop reading.
Likely Stories - Recommendations from Reviews in 2025
With the momentum of the holiday season starting to pick up, this week's Likely Stories is dedicated to an always dependable gift option. Whether it's for loved ones, or as a treat for yourself, today we're picking out a few titles our eclectic team of reviewers highlighted in 2025. A collection of page turners that would make for great additions to any bookshelf.
Likely Stories - Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
When I chose a book to review for Likely Stories, I think back to those that have stuck with me, books that I've recommended to people over and over again. Today I want to tell you about one of my favorite books. My name is Heather White. I teach art history at Baylor and today I’m reviewing the historical crime novel Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters, written in 2002.
Likely Stories - The Treasure Hunters Club by Tom Ryan
Welcome back to Likely Stories. I’m Paige Connell, and I teach English at Midway High School. Billed as “Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone” meets “The Goonies”, I can confirm that this fun, winding story of buried treasure and buried secrets gives off strong vibes of that great book and the classic movie.
Likely Stories - Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
Hello, I am Rebecca Flavin, Director of Engaged Learning Curriculum and Senior Lecturer in Political Science at Baylor University. One of the best books I have read so far this year is Shelby Van Pelt’s, “Remarkably Bright Creatures.”
Likely Stories - Mr. Texas by Lawrence Wright
“Mr. Texas,” by Pulitzer Prize winner Lawrence Wright, is a novel about the making of a Texas state legislator.
Likely Stories - The Unworthy by Augustina Bazterrica
Welcome to this weeks edition of Likely Stories, my name is Malcolm Foster, operations assistant at KWBU. The book I want to discuss today is a brutal, yet occasionally beautiful example of how some things, for better and worse, even in the most drastic of scenarios, never change.

Douglas Henry is Dean of the Honors College at Baylor University. With a Ph.D. in philosophy from Vanderbilt and a love for great literature, he’s taught students of all ages everything from Homer’s Iliad to Cormac McCarthy's The Road. He has made Waco home for over 20 years, and is deeply engaged in the local community, showing the usefulness of philosophy for life by developing a small pocket neighborhood, The Cloister at Cameron Park, and helping to launch Waco’s wonderful community bookshop, Fabled Bookshop & Cafe.