1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Pariah and Other Stories (1983)
by Joan Williams
Arkabutla, Mississippi
Mississippi: 11/18
I read this slim volume of short stories sitting in court in a single afternoon, waiting for my matter to be called. Pariah is geographically distinct because it is the northwestern location within the entire chapter spanning Florida to Louisiana. Louisiana is further west but the northern border of Louisiana is miles south of the northern border that runs through Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi. Thus, Arkabutla is closer to Memphis than any large population center in Mississippi.
Williams is best known as a protege of William Faulkner- her bare bones Wikipedia page is almost comical in its lack of biographical detail- surely Joan Williams is a candidate for a literary revival? Perhaps though it's the perspective- like Flannery O'Connor her characters are losers and weirdos- the collection of short stories beginning with three interconnected stories about a mentally challenged person. There is frequent and unkind use of the n-word- many of these characters can be described as poorer whites who fear and resent the incipient Civil Rights movement, a frequent subject of discussion among the characters.
I can see how folks might shy away from reviving stories like these, but I found the obtuseness refreshing, as well as the literary ambition.
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