1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Ellen Foster (1987)
by Kaye Gibbons
Rocky Mount, North Carolina
North Carolina: 11/20
The caption that 1,001 Novels: A Library of America editor Susan Straight wrote for Ellen Foster says, "In a voice like no other, a young girl tells the story of the dissolution of her family..." I have to take issue with that statement, since the voice of a young girl in difficult circumstances is the single most prevalent voice in the entire 1,001 Novels project. Every state has at least one book that could be accurately described the same way, and many of the large states have multiple books that could be described this way. It's only a mild spoiler to reveal that the name of the book comes from the fact that Ellen, the narrator and protagonist, proudly takes the name of the foster family who takes her in, because she thinks "Foster" is their name, and a generic description. Ellen describes a childhood that is utterly familiar to me as a result of all the similar books in the 1,001 Novels project: One dead parent, one absent parent, an immediate family that isn't inclined to help. Just about the only thing that doesn't happen in this book that a reader might reasonably expect is that the protagonist isn't sexually abused by a relative or friend of the family. To be fair, she does have a distinctive voice, and it's a good Audiobook because it's just her recounting her history to the reader for the entire book.
No comments:
Post a Comment