1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Yellow Jack (1999)
by Josh Russell
New Orleans, Louisiana
Louisiana: 12/28
Josh Russell is the first 1,001 Novels: A Library of American writer I can remember who does not have a Wikipedia page. He is gainfully employed, as the director of the Creative Writing Program at Georgia State University. I did take a creative writing class in college- it struck me as a borderline insane way to spend one's time and energy. I don't have a ton of respect for the teachers or students of creative writing, beyond recognizing that teaching creative writing is by the far the best way for authors of literary fiction to support themselves and their families- you gotta do what you gotta do.
Yellow Jack is set in dirty old New Orleans, about a protagonist who learns the tricks and methods of the earliest kind of photography in the studio of originator Louis Daugerre, and then flees to New Orleans, where he sets up the very first photography studio. Russell does an excellent job of conjuring early to middle 19th century New Orleans- a place where summer inevitably bought death in the form of Yellow Fever. Claude Marchand lives a life of passion and intrigue, juggling a mixed-race girlfriend and the sexually precocious (and way underage) daughter of a local bigwig. Meanwhile, the mercury that was key to developing early photographs is causing his teeth to fall out and driving him not-so-slowly insane. I wouldn't say Yellow Jack was a fun read, but it was interesting.
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