1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Yonder Stands Your Orphan (2001)
by Barry Hannah
Clinton, Mississippi
Mississippi: 2/18
Both Mississippi and Alabama scored eighteen titles in the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project. That ties them for last place in this specific chapter, behind Florida, Louisiana and Georgia. 18 titles does put them both above the single digit states of the mid-Atlantic. I've also moved away from the original 13 colonies of the Atlantic seaboard and into the first of the hinterlands that were settled (excepting those that lay within the original 13 colonies). Here, the dynamic was first, the clearing out/removal of the Native tribes- most of whom were property holding and "civilized" within the usage of that term at the time. Second, it was the cotton revolution which opened up huge swaths of Alabama and especially Mississippi for enormous, slave driven cotton plantations. The need for slaves, exhaustion of the soil in the upper south from Tobacco farming and the ban on the importation of slaves from abroad drove a huge, forced population movement, as the slave holders of the Virginias and Carolinas sold their slaves "down the river" to work on the plantations of the newer south.
Not that Yonder Stands Your Orphan, by moderately well-known southern author Barry Hannah, addresses any of that. Instead, Orphan is a loosely assembled collection of eccentric and violent characters living around a lake. It's not a great book- it was the author's last novel- but it, at least, interesting, and neither a work of chick-lit or a YA title. I will say I've never read a book where so many people were sliced open by knives.
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