Lonnie-Lew Hensley, a likeable, but sometimes short-on-common sense “good ol’ boy” type, ends up marrying Daisy Faith Grogan, a big-breasted vocalist/keyboard player in a four-piece country/Western band, who specializes in performing cheatin’ songs. Lonnie-Lew and Daisy Faith’s marriage–all two months, twelve days and eight hours of it–is, to say the least, a rocky one.
Lonnie-Lew learns the hard way that Daisy Faith regards the lyrics of the cheatin’ songs she sings as just make-believe; Daisy Faith makes it clear that “If I ever catch a man of mine cheatin’ on me for real, I gar-un-damn-tee you he’ll never cheat on me again "
Lonnie-Lew is visited by the ghost of his uncle Norville “Knock ’em Through the Wall” Lewis, a former dirt-track racecar driver, who, in 1961, mysteriously disappeared and was never heard from again.
The hilariously funny “Sing Me a Cheatin’ Song, Daisy Faith,” which is set in the North Carolina foothills and the mountains of northwestern North Carolina and northeastern Tennessee during the summer of 1983, is Doug McGuinn’s third novel.