Dedicated to classics and hits.

Friday, February 14, 2025

Scarlet Sister Mary (1928) by Julia Peterkin

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Scarlet Sister Mary (1928)
by Julia Peterkin
Fort Motte, South Carolina
South Carolina: 14/16

    I actually do want to visit South Carolina, Charleston, particularly, and I thought the books from that part of the state were interesting and the ones from outside the city less so.  Scarlet Sister Mary is a Pulitzer Prize winner and it is also a book about freed black slaves written in dialect by a white author so.... kind of cringe? I mean, it's cringe, but what are you going to do.  Mary, the eponymous protagonist, is a woman who marries young and is quickly abandoned by her husband, leading her to have multiple children with a succession of men to the mild approbation of her community.  Having now done enough non-fiction reading (largely via the NY Times hundred best books of the 21st century, which has a half dozen titles on the subject), I now understand that the idea of imposing conventional bourgeois morality on a formerly enslaved population is absurd since the women were forced to have sex by their owners whenever and wherever they pleased, and their children were then frequently sold as slaves.  Where does Christian morality have a place in that world?

  So, I guess beside the entire premise being ridiculous, it's an interesting milieu and one entirely absent of white faces.

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Bastard out of Carolina (1992) by Dorothy Allison

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Bastard Out of Carolina (1992)
by Dorothy Allison
Greenville, South Carolina
South Carolina:  13/16

    Bastard Out of Carolina had me searching for the "Trauma Porn" wikipedia page (which they have titled "Misery Lit" to see if this would have been one of the first books in that genre and sure enough, the Wikipedia page lists Wild Swans (1992) and Angela's Ashes (1996) as "seminal works establishing the genre."  I think there is a good case to add this book to that list. In more old fasthioned terminology it's a bildungsroman about the miserable childhood of the author who was raised by her mother and abusive (physical, mental and yes, sexual) step father in shit town South Carolina (AKA Greenville).  Bastard Out of Carolina still has a capacity to shock over thirty years later- particularly the scenes where the protagonist pleasures herself to the thought of her (physical) abuse at the hands of her stepfather.  

   When things escalate to full blown rape later in the book, she does not take delight in the experience.  Besides exploring that extremely, extremely forbidden link between childhood sexual abuse and precocious sexuality,  Bastard Out of Carolina is also notable/ahead of its time in the way it depicts a mother who ultimately choses her partner over her child.  That continues to be a fraught subject, as the recent turmoil surrounding Nobel Prize winner Alice Munro, demonstrates. 

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Stranger than Fiction: Lives of the 20th Century Novel (2024) by Edwin Frank

 Book Review
Stranger Than Fiction: 
Lives of the 20th Century Novel (2024)
by Edwin Frank

   There was probably no one on EARTH more excited about the prospect of reading Stranger Than Fiction: Lives of the 20th Century Novel:  A book pitched at a general reader offering a meandering stroll through some subjective highlights from the 20th century literary canon? Yes please!   Because I was so excited, someone considering reading this book shouldn't be put off by the fact that I ultimately felt disappointed by Stranger Than Fiction.  I certainly appreciated the premise, and enjoyed certain chapters, but on the whole I finished without having added significantly to my thoughts about the 20th century novel. 

   Or maybe it's more the case that the blog format doesn't allow me to do this book justice.  I think to really appreciate Stranger Than Fiction I would have to buy a copy (I checked out the e-book from the library) and really mark it up, make marginal notations, etc.  Then I would need someone to talk about this book with, someone who has read as much as the author.  

   One of the things I did think about after reading was Frank's idea that the 20th century novel was in conversation with itself from the very beginning.  His best illustration of this was the dialogue that publisher/critic/author Virginia Woolf had with James Joyce and Ulysses, a book she did not like.  Here we are, right in the center of the genesis/apogee of the 20th century novel and one major author hates the work of another major author.  

    

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

In the Heat of the Night (1965) by John Ball

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
In the Heat of the Night (1965)
by John Ball
Wells, South Carolina
South Carolina: 12/16

  I am inching towards closing out Virginia/North and South Carolina.  In the Heat of the Night was a welcome respite from the parade of sad girls that populate a majority of the 1,001 Novels project and it's a certified classic as well- I checked out the Penguin Classics 50th anniversary edition from the library.  My sense is that In the Heat of the Night has been soft-dropped out of any applicable canon because it's a book with a black protagonist written  by a white guy AND because the white characters use the n-word like it is going out of style throughout the book- they are an obviously unsympathetic bunch, but I swear, there is an n word on almost every of the 150 pages of In the Heat of the Night,  It's hard to imagine a contemporary reader stomaching the rough language without taking offense (or wanting to read a similar book written by a black author).  

  The black police detective from Pasadena- Virgil Tibbs- is a very pre-1960's type of fellow- always careful not to give offense to his racist white hosts, even as the n bombs explode around him. The idea that Tibbs would want to help these people solve a murder seemed laughable to me. 

Monday, February 10, 2025

Dry Bones in the Valley (2014) by Tim Bouman

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Dry Bones in the Valley (2014)
by Tim Bouman
Susquehanna Municipality, Franklin Forks, Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania: 5/27


  Dry Bones in the Valley is another regional police procedural set in the Pennstucky, i.e. the Pennsylvania Appalachians.   Unlike the Amish-country set snoozer from yesterday,  Dry Bones in the Valley is more interesting, if only because of the frequent and animated presence of guns, gun fire and gun play on nearly every page.  It turns out the people in this part of the country really like their guns.  All kind of guns- pistols, rifles and even muzzle loaded muskets, which play an important part in unravelling one of the two murders that must be solved.

   Bouman does an excellent job of evoking this unfamiliar (to me, anyway) part of the country, with plenty of well described walks in different landscapes. There isn't a great deal of tension that the murder victim remains a john doe up until the case is actually solved, which guts many of the emotions a reader might invest in a book of this genre.  There is very little building of the case and then the solving at the end reads like something out of an Encyclopedia Brown book, but still, I did enjoy this relative to other examples of detective fiction in the 1,001 Novels project.

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