VANISHED EMPIRES

Dedicated to classics and hits.

Thursday, October 17, 2024

In West Mills (2019) by De'Shawn Charles Winslow

1,001 Novels: A Library of America

In West Mills (2019)
 by De'Shawn Charles Winslow
711 Main Street, South Mills, North Carolina
North Carolina: 4/20

  In West Mills was the debut novel by author De'Shawn Charles Winslow, about a fictional African-American community in the northeastern tip of North Carolina.  I really enjoyed this book, centered around Azalea "Knot" Centre, an unconventional woman who is a dedicated reader and equally dedicated alcoholic.   Set between the 1940's and the 1980's, In West Mills nearly takes place out of time- the characters are blessedly unaware of the societal upheaval that never reaches their little piece of heaven. 

  Most of the book concerns Knot and her decision to have two children and surrender them to her childless neighbors.  She is present as they grow up, and the plot expands to encompass her children and their lives as Winslow moves through the decades.  Knot also has her friends- Otis Lee, and Valley, the local representative of the LGBT community in West Mills.  She also has her enemies- one of her neighbors betrays her secret pregnancy and subsequent surrender of her children to her parents, and they refuse to talk to her for the rest of the book. In West Mills is unusual for the books from the south in that it is, basically, a book only about African Americans with little or no white presence.  Most of the books from the south contain both black and white characters, and the plots are often about their interrelationships.  Contrast this to the north, and New York City in particular, where single ethnicity books are the rule, rather than the exception. 

  Also this was a very good Audiobook.

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The House Behind the Cedars (1900) by Charles W. Chesnutt

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
 The House Behind the Cedars (1900)
by Charles W. Chesnutt 
Fayetteville, North Carolina
North Carolina: 3/20

   I was under the impression that the only Fayetteville was the one in Arkansas, but here we are in Fayetteville North Carolina for this excellent minor classic, The House Behind the Cedars, written by bi-racial (that's not what they called it back then!) author, Charles. W. Chesnutt.  This is the kind of book I'd hope to see a lot more of in the 1,001 Novels project.  First, it's a book from the 19th century (I extend the 19th century through the beginning of World War I in 1914).  Second, it's a book with some wit to it, that also exists in a recognizable literary universe- allusions to Walter Scott and a 19th century version of a Renaissance Faire both appear in its pages.  Third, it's a point of view: That of the "passing" of people with African American ancestry for white, that is little encountered in contemporary literary culture. 

   Generally speaking, any actually readable American novel written before The Great Gatsby is a find, and I enjoyed reading The House Behind the Cedars, even if the frequent discussion of "the race question" is galling to contemporary ears.  Also, the frequent use of the n word, and not in a nice way, by bigoted Southern characters. You aren't going to get assigned The House Behind the Cedars in your introduction to American Lit class, let's put it that way.  I would love to find more books written before World War I on the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America list. Rediscovering 19th Century American Literature is a potential gold-mine, or silver-mine, anyway. 

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

The Third Realm (2024)by Karl Ove Knausgaard

 Audiobook Review
The Third Realm (2024)
by Karl Ove Knausgaard

   We are now three books into Karl Ove Knausgaard's "The Morning Star" series, which combines his trademark close examination of the minutiae of everyday life and everyday thoughts with some kind of a supernatural thriller plot that revolves around a mysterious "new star" which appears in the sky over contemporary Norway and somehow stops all deaths.  Three books in and the general public is still unaware of the phenomenon.  To slow things down even further, Knausgaard uses the third volume to introduce an almost entirely new cast of characters, including a naive Norwegian teen and her nefarious black-metal boyfriend.  In fact, it is Norwegian black metal that takes an astonishing front-of-house position in this volume, as a Norwegian detective seeks to solve the gruesomely mysterious slaying of three members of a lesser Norwegian black metal band at the hands of forces unknown.

  There is also a neurologist who is called in to investigate brain activity in people who were thought to be brain dead, Tove a manic-depressive housewife and painter and Gaute, a teacher and husband to previously described character Katrina (a clergywoman with the church of Norway.) Still no idea how long this series will continue- could be endless?

Monday, October 14, 2024

The House Girl (2013) by Tara Conklin

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
The House Girl (2013)
by Tara Conklin
Lyndhurst, Virginia
Virginia: 4/17

    One observation I would make about Virginia and North Carolina is this theme of enslaved people being sold from the relatively benign environments of the upper South to the harsher, crueler world of the cotton belt:  Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.  The plantation economy of places like Lyndhurst, Virginia is one of perpetual, inevitable decline as the soil failed from primitive 17th and 18th century farming techniques.  Instead, you had these small plantations owned by families who owned multiple properties or leased land to others, or made their money from a profession or trade.  The slaves in these environments were an asset of the estate that could be sold off in times of economic distress to places that needed man and woman power.

   The House Girl is two inter-related stories, one about Lina, a contemporary attorney working at a white-shoe law firm, she lives in Brooklyn with her artist Father and a mother who "died" under mysterious circumstances.  She is recruited by a partner at her firm to work on an unusual case undertaken at the behest of an African-American defense contractor, a lawsuit for reparations for slavery.  She is tasked with finding the so-called, "Lead Plaintiff," a lineal descendent of an enslaved individual who can serve as the face of the lawsuit.

  This story intersects with that of Josephine, the "house girl" of the title and an 18th century slave who works as the lady-in-waiting for her dying mistress on a swampy, run-down Virginia plantation.  The House Girl is a good pick for the 1,001 Novels project on a couple of levels.  First, with over 7000 Amazon reviews it is a certified hit by the standards of literary fiction (though this isn't quite that).  Second, Lyndhurst is the farthest east location for a Virginia title save two books set near the Cumberland Gap (that's a thing, right?), and the gloomy, gothic plantation where Josephine lives is very evocative of the time and place. 

  

   

Friday, October 11, 2024

Winter Birds (1994) by Jim Grimsley

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Winter Birds (1994)
by Jim Grimsley
Grifton, North Carolina
North Carolina: 2/20

   Winter Birds is another incredibly dark family drama written from the perspective of the son an extremely dysfunctional family living off a Freeway in rural North Carolina.  Winter Birds is so dark that it was originally published in German translation after no American publisher would take it.  After the German language translation, Grimsley did find a publisher but it was never a hit- Publisher's Weekly straight up panned it, for many of the same reasons I didn't enjoy reading the book.

 Grimsley is primarily a play-wright, and Winter Birds reads like a play- the entire book takes place inside the family home and is told in the second person.   Basically, the entire book is an extended scene of domestic violence, with multiple- multiple lengthy scenes that are basically this guy's one-armed father chasing his poor mom around the house with a knife.  Dad commits all types of atrocities including stabbing the family dog to death while screaming "this is you" to his wife, who is hiding in the woods.  In the culminating scene/waking nightmare, Dad forces the narrator to have sex with his own mother.  Horrific! 

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Children of Men (1991) by Jeanne Schinto

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Children of Men (1991)
by Jeanne Schinto
Southeast, Washington DC
Washington DC: 12/12

    That's a wrap for Washington DC!  Children of Men, not to be confused with the PD James dystopian-future novel that was made into a very good movie, this book is about a member of the white economic underclass- the daughter of a father who moved out of the Appalachian region for work after World War II. Cathy "Bird Legs" Ashwell has the deck stacked against her from day one.  She lives in a run-down rental in a bad part of town.  Her dad is a flag-operator on construction sites who drinks himself to sleep every day after work.  Her mom left.  Her younger brother is a drug-addict after returning from Vietnam, her sister is a whore-in-the-making.  Cathy makes one decision for herself in this book- to pursue a young African American guy from her neighborhood, which, of course, works out poorly for her.  She talks her way into joining her paramour and her drug-addict brother on a criminal enterprise that ends with her brother dead, her paramour in jail in Virginia and herself gang raped.   She gets back home, finds out she is pregnant, has the kid, gets another boyfriend, has two more kids before she is 21 under what can only be described as horrific circumstances and spends the rest of the book trying to get her act together.

  Children of Men is so dark it actually warrants comparison to the PD James novel- the presence of any kind of light in this novel is so dim that one wonders why write it at all.   This was the first and only novel by Jeanne Schinto, who was born in Greenwich Connecticut but graduated from George Washington and the Johns Hopkins creative writing program.  Presumably, Cathy Ashwell is based on someone she met while doing some kind of social work in the District.  Kudos to editor Susan Straight for giving some attention to this book, which otherwise has disappeared from the public consciousness. 

Wednesday, October 09, 2024

Thank You For Smoking (1994) by Christopher Buckley

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Thank You For Smoking (1994)
by Christopher Buckley
Capitol Hill, Washington DC
Washington DC: 11/12

   I read Thank You For Smoking, Christopher Buckley's satire(!?!) of the lobbying industry when it came out- or shortly thereafter, when I was actually living in and attending school in Washington DC.   A comic novel is a rare thing these days.  I didn't re-read it for the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project, but it 's about a tobacco lobbyist who is kidnapped by anti-tobacco activists.  Very 90's plot.

Tuesday, October 08, 2024

Lincoln in the Bardo (2017) by George Saunders

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Lincoln in the Bardo (2017)
by George Saunders
Georgetown, Washington DC
Washington DC: 10/12

  Of course I read Lincoln in the Bardo the year it came out.  Before it won the Booker Prize, even.  It looks like I listened to the Audiobook back in 2021- that must have been a covid thing. I really enjoyed this book.  Saunders got three books onto the recent New York Times Best Books of the 21st Century, including this book, which is in line with his position as a writer who has established himself as a short story writer who is treated like a novelist and then as a prize winning novelists once he decided to actually write a novel.  It's a close call between this book and All of Aunt Hagar's Children for best DC title in the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project.  Here is the post from 2017:

Published 9/18/17
Lincoln in the Bardo (2017)
by George Saunders


  So here I am, more or less caught up with contemporary fiction.  The 1001 Books Project originally ended in 2006, so "the present" means the period between then and 2017.  Reviews of contemporary books will focus on their potential for canonical status, with the understanding that it is unknowable whether I am correct or not.   Unfortunately, the single best indicator would seem to be those books that either win major literary prizes or are nominated for such.  This criterion will take into account the sales record of each title, since simply looking at the best seller for canon candidates (while efficient) is simply too depressing to contemplate.

  Lincoln in the Bardo is the second 2017 book I've read in this category- the first being Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad.  Both books were selected based on their low odds on the Ladbrook's table for Booker Prize shortlist nominees.  Lincoln in the Bardo DID make the short list, The Underground Railroad did not.   Lincoln in the Bardo also has the top odds to win the prize- currently at 2/1.  Author  George Saunders is well known as a short-story writer and an essayist- I actually saw him speak last year in Los Angeles because my girlfriend is a fan and I left saying, "Well, he should write a novel." (He alluded to the fact that he was doing so during his talk.)

   So here is that novel, and yes, he did do an amazing job writing his first novel, with critical plaudits and an appearance at the top of the New York Times best-seller list.   It is a very appealing package: First time novel by a known quantity, combines historical fiction and the supernatural, popular United States President (Abraham Lincoln) appears as a major character (though not the Lincoln of the title.) AND- AND- it's is very, very easy to read, written in a format where each statement is written in citation format, whether or not it takes the form of actual dialogue or a quote from a historic text about the Lincoln administration.

  The Bardo of the title refers to the Tibetan spiritual concept which roughly equates to "purgatory"- neither heaven nor hell but a kind of supernatural waiting room, where unresolved issues may cause spirits to linger in the corporeal world as spirits, their issues reflected in their "physical" demeanor.  The Lincoln of the title is the President's son, William "Willie" Lincoln.  He died at the very beginning of the Civil War, and the story is "based" on two subsequent visits that the President made to Willie's tomb.

  Saunders manages to pack an astonishing number of voices into the 300 pages- over 100 by most accounts.  The other voices are other left behind spirits, and each of them adds some value to Saunders vision of Civil War era America. The grave yard in which Willie is laid to rest stands next to a paupers grave where African-Americans and vagrants were unceremoniously dumped, and thus Saunders is able to inject more social concern into a novel about ghosts and Abraham Lincoln than one might initially consider possible.

  It is this extra level of plot- the white graveyard next to the black graveyard, which I think really pushes Bardo into canonical territory.  Also, the fact that is both clearly a work of "experimental" fiction AND fast/easy to read and understand- that is a rare quality, and a canonical quality.   I think, weighing against it is the fact that it lacks the "weight" that often marks a canonical novel.  The technique of writing an entire book as a series of quotes from other sources detracts from the over-all impact, and may directly alienate less serious readers- a key component of the audience for a newly canonical text.

   Surely, the winning or losing of the Booker Prize will be a huge factor. The prize, like the winnowing of the long list to a short list is notoriously unpredictable, but with 2/1 odds, Lincoln in the Bardo is the odds on favorite.

Monday, October 07, 2024

Henry and Clara (1994) by Thomas Mallon

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Henry and Clara (1994)
by Thomas Mallon
Ford's Theater, Washington DC
Washington DC: 9/12

    I have a vague memory of touring Ford's Theater, perhaps on my Junior High trip to the capital. It couldn't have been during college, when I eschewed all "touristy stuff" in favor of undergraduate ennui.  The 1,001 Novels project has this book mapped at the theater because the couple in the title- He:  A Union Army soldier returned from the just completed Civil War and She: A friend and confident of the largely friendless and confidant-less Mary Lincoln were, in fact, in the box with Lincoln and Mary when John Wikes Booth shot him, Henry also being stabbed by Booth before he(Booth) jumped out of the theater box to the stage below.

   Writing books about actual historical people is Mallon's schtick and Henry and Clara is a good choice for a chapter on books about Washington DC because the protagonist is Clara, wife of Henry, and she describes Civil War Era DC like a character out of Vanity Fair.  The reader really gets a sense of the place circa 1860 onward.   Henry and Clara is chock a block with historical detail but the plot itself: Henry's slow decline into madness after surviving the assassination attempt is hampered because Clara, like most people of that era, doesn't understand much about the process of mental illness.   

Friday, October 04, 2024

Nothing Gold Can Stay(2013) by Ron Rash

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Nothing Gold Can Stay (2013)
by Ron Rash
Boiling Springs, North Carolina
North Carolina: 1/20

   North Carolina, here we go.  I drove through North Carolina once after college driving between Washington DC and San Francisco, but I didn't stop and I've never been back.  These days what I know about North Carolina is that it's a reddish-purple state with some strong universities, a big African-American population and a bunch of southern white people.   I'm looking forward to actually learning something about North Carolina via the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project and Nothing Gold Can Stay, a book of short-stories by Ron Rash, is a good start.

    Boiling Springs is mapped on the border of North and South Carolina, about half way between Charlotte and Asheville.  It's a whole lot of nothing according to the characters, who see a two-hour drive to an Indian Casino as a big trip.  One reoccurring motif is characters filling out financial aid forms for college- there are fourteen stories in this collection and financial aid forms are mentioned in four or five of them.   There's also meth addiction, illegal bear hunting and run-down shacks a plenty.  Despite the repetition of the financial aid motif and the author's steady disregard for providing endings to the stories, I enjoyed Nothing Gold Can Stay and Rash is the first author in weeks where I've considered looking further into his bibliography. 

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