1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Sweetwater Creek (2005)
by Anne River Siddons
Hunting Island, South Carolina
South Carolina: 1/13
Anne River Siddons was (d. 2019) a well-known writer of popular fiction of and about the South. She never won any major literary prizes but she had some hits, and signed a 10 million dollar book deal at a time when that was still a lot of money. Sweetwater Creek is the first book from South Carolina. South Carolina has a pretty distinctive role in the history of the South by being a primary market for the slave trade. At the same time, there is some of the social flexibility that is more typically associated with New Orleans- the idea of an urban class of free blacks and mixed-race people that is absent in other parts of the South. In Virginia, for example, freed slaves were forced to leave Virginia almost immediately upon pain of death, which meant that the population of free blacks was very limited.
Charleston also developed an intellectual culture that drew upon the outsiders who came and went for trading purposes- more outward looking than comparable locations in North Carolina and Virginia. Which all goes to say that the area around Charleston is the most interesting place in this chapter. Sweetwater Creek doesn't take place in Charleston but it operates in the orbit of Charleston, since the plot is a bildungsroman about a young girl who crosses paths with an alcoholic college age southern debutante who is in full flight from her life as a well-to-do young Charleston lady. I listened to the Audiobook since it looks like I'm going to run out of available Audiobooks from titles in this chapter long before I finish reading the non-Audiobook titles.
As Audiobooks go, it was one of the excruciating ones- with a third person narrator telling the story entirely from the perspective of this adolescent girl who has never left her Dad's spaniel raising operation in the South Carolina low country. I lost track of the number of times the protagonist broke down in tears and ran crying to her room to be comforted by her dog. I did think the depiction of the low country was really memorable and that was really the only thing that kept me slogging through the story to the end.
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