I'm the READING-HAlF-THE-DAY-OR-HALF-THE-NIGHT woman, although I've never been a reviewer and couldn't be if I tried. I did pass the MFA program by taking a lot of Tagamet to get through the writing of the-degree-year essay. But books. You can't stop me from reading. I read. The book I just frinished this morning is THE SONG OF SOLOMON, (for the 2nd time in my life) written by Toni Morrison. It's one of the best books ever written. My cat was so happy he said "Meow" when I held the book up and he saw me take it off the bed to put back on the bookshelf because it had fallen on his head so many times this week.
Okay, down to business. I will declare:
There has been a lot of good poetry written here in the mountains in the past few years, but if I have to say, I have no trouble saying: In her book When the Sap Rises, Glends Barrett gives us the most authentic voice to rise out of the southern mountains in years. Whether she is eating an apple with a knife or if she is knee deep, fishing in Owl Creek, here is a woman who is as immersed in her environment as in her daily existnce. Barrett's concerns for family and heritage go beyond what happened, for her poems celebrate life, transcend sorrow, and show the reader what was learned. Available at Amazon.com and Finishing Line Press, 2008) .
My favorite novel set in the mountains in recent years is Charles Frazier's thirteen moons,
(2006, Random House) It was a joy to live the life of young Will Cooper from age 12 to the
end. I know, it's fiction. I know Frazier wrote in the back of the book how "Will Cooper is not
William Holland Thomas, though they do share some DNA." I know Frazier emphasized that Charley is not Tsali. Bla, bla. I knew the "history" before I read the book. I knew the story. I lived and breathed thirteen moons. For me, thirteen moons was a better book than Cold Mountain, for which the author received the National Book Award, but I did not succeed in getting anyone who would agree with me nor even disucss thirteen moons.
My favorite children's book from the mountains is MOUNTAIN WEDDING by Faye Gibbons. I want to know who ever has my copy to bring it back now. Gibbons was born in Carter's Quarter in the north Georgia mountains in 1938 and has authored 13 published books.
http://www.amazon.com/Mountain-Wedding-Faye-Gibbons/dp/1590783247
Thanks, Nancy, for this wonderful post. I have to say that I love Cold Mt. and didn't find 13 Moons as powerful, but after all, it's a different sort of novel. CM has such memorable language that I can open it just about anywhere and get my "fix" for the day. Thank you for singling out Glenda Barrett's fine work. And the children's book---I must go in search of it.
ReplyDeleteThis is why I wanted us to do this, to share and celebrate!
I'm with Kay. I loved Cold Mountain and but didn't find the same pull in 13 Moons.
ReplyDeleteRight now I'm deep into the jungle of Viet Nam in "Matterhorn", by Karl Marlantes, his first novel. The story is so powerful and his writing so real I am drawn to the 566 pg. monster like I haven't been drawn to a story in so long.
I believe Ron Rash's Serena was such a book. Serena is a woman who dared...and did. Rash's work hits home as someone who knows and understands the mountains.
I'm sorry I didn't get into this before, writing about mountain books, but I was lost in writing my own "mountain woman" story and couldn't leave it.
Maybe we could celebrate and discuss books by NC authors, in general. Or what draws us closer to one book than the next one on a shelf. Glenda Barrett, Glenda Beall,and Nancy Simpson are to be commended on theire "songs" about the mountains.
Thanks for letting me air my comments.
i, too, loved Cold Mountain but could not get that interested in 13 Moons.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to see some interest in the topic of Appalachian writers.