Category: Southern Fiction (Page 14 of 24)

As I Lay Dying premiers at the Cannes Film Festival

as i lay dying film posterJames Franco’s film adaptation of William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying will premier at the Cannes Film Festival on May 20. I wonder if we will ever be able to see it in Jackson . . .

Check out the trailer and see what you think!

The film tells the story of the death of Addie Bundren (Beth Grant) and her family’s quest to honor her wish to be buried in the nearby town of Jefferson.

Franco wrote, directed and stars in the film as Darl Bundren, Addie’s second oldest son, and “True Blood” star Jim Parrack as Cash Bundren, Addie’s eldest son. Additional members of the cast include Richard Jenkins, Danny McBride, Logan Marshall-Green, Ahna O’Reilly and Tim Blake Nelson.

Southern Cross the Dog by Bill Cheng

southern cross the dogBill Cheng definitely knows how to write a first novel that will get everybody talking. How does a native New Yorker who has never set foot in Mississippi capture the lives of black and white on the Mississippi Delta during the flood of 27 and beyond?

Well, that was mine and many other people’s question as well.  Before you know it, Julie Bosman of The New York Times was calling Lemuria and Square Books to get the story on Southern Cross the Dog. Here is the link to the full article online, appearing in print in the May 9th issue of The New York Times. The article is worth your time to read. Bosman gives the inside story of how Cheng’s love of the blues translated into a novel that has won the approval of Bill Ferris and Edward P. Jones.

And yes, I am still reading Southern Cross the Dog and hope to finish it this weekend. It’s been a great read and I can’t wait to finish it.

libraryBill Cheng will be signing and reading at Lemuria at 5:00 and 5:30 on Monday, May 20th.

Cheng will also be at The Library Lounge at the Fairview Inn at 6:30 on May 20th to read and sign. If you haven’t been to the Lounge yet–it’s wonderful. A cozy bar with lots of books and Lemuria will be on hand to sell Southern Cross the Dog.

The Kings and Queens of Roam

The cover of Daniel Wallace’s newest book, The Kings and Queens of Roam, is rainbows and butterflies; two silhouetted girls meet on a bridge spanning a bottomless valley; the text is made from twisted grasses. The story within, however, is not quite as picturesque.

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The contemporary fairytale follows the insular lives of two orphaned sisters–one blind and beautiful, the other able to see, but ugly–as they press against the edges of their dying small town. The sisters are the last descendants of the town’s founder–a man who imported silk worms to the isolated valley, set on carving from the thick woods a paradise. The silkworms, however, did not take to their new home.

The town in the time of the sisters is far from a paradise; ghosts are taking up residence in the decaying opulence. Dogs run in packs through the streets. In this vivid setting, the sisters must rely on each other to survive, but their faults begin to overshadow their virtues as they grow older. Daniel Wallace weaves a complex story of jealousy and trust–the battle all sisters fight–until the conflict spills out over the edges of the town.

As he did in Big Fish and Mr. Sebastian and the Negro Magician, Wallace continues to expolore the nature of truth, revealing again that it is not what is seen but what is believed.

Daniel Wallace will be at Lemuria this Friday (May 10th) to read and sign his new book. Come out for $1 beers and a good time at 5 PM.

Great reading with Jill McCorkle

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We had a great reading with Jill McCorkle last evening. She had us all doubled over with laughter as she read from her new novel Life after Life. I love the opening quote:

“There is the land of the living and a land of the dead and the bridge is love, the only survival, the only meaning.” -Thornton Wilder

Our signed copies are dwindling quickly, so stop by and get one before they’re all gone!

Tony La Russa & John Grisham

You may have heard that Tony La Russa will be signing Friday, November 30 at 5:00. Here’s a sneak peak from his book One Last Strike. This passage is from the Foreward written by John Grisham:

“. . . Tony graciously invited me to come to St. Louis, watch a game, hang out with the team, and have a late dinner. I collected my dad, Big John, and away we went. It was a memorable visit, the highlight being Big John and Stan the Man sitting together for two hours watching the Cardinals and reminiscing. Leaving St. Louis the following day, my dad informed me that he had now reached the pinnacle, his life was complete, and he was ready for the hereafter. Thankfully, he’s still around and doesn’t need a Cardinal game on television.”

“In late spring of 2011, I called Tony and told him I finally had an idea for a baseball novel. The central plot involved a beanball and baseball’s unwritten code for dealing with it. Talk about a hot-button topic. Nothing torments Tony like a hit batter. Was it intentional? Do we retaliate? If so, when? And who do we hit? In his dugout, he makes the call, and by doing so takes the pressure of his players. Other managers refuse to touch the issue, instead allowing their players to handle things. More than once I’ve heard Tony describe how a perfectly civilized baseball game can change in an instant by a fastball up and in . . .”

And there you have the beginnings of Calico Joe.

One Last Strike: Fifty Years in Baseball, Ten and a Half Games Back, and One Final Championship Season by Tony La Russa with Rick Hummel, William Morrow Press, 2012. Signed First Edition, $27.99.

Calico Joe: A Novel by John Grisham, Doubleday, April 2012. Signed First Edition, $24.95.

Writing the Jersey Shore in the Age of Reality TV by Michael Kardos

We have chosen Michael Kardos’ debut novel, The Three-Day Affair, as Lemuria’s October First Edition Club selection. FEC members you are in for a thrill ride. Read The Story behind the Pick here.

Join us tomorrow at 5:00 for a signing with Michael Kardos. A reading will follow at 5:30.

In this essay Michael Kardos elaborates on the challenge of establishing place and calls on literature greats Eudora Welty, William Faulkner, Tobias Wolff for aid in the age of Snooki. This essay first appeared in The Millions. We are sharing it with kind permission of Michael Kardos. -Lisa

1.

When I was a boy in the late 70s and early 80s, my friends and I would sit on the beach in the heat of summer and watch the garbage barges leaving New York Harbor. The barges looked immense. They had to be, since they carried the thousands of daily tons of whatever New York City’s offices and factories and seven-million citizens no longer wanted. The barges traveled south, away from Long Island and toward New Jersey — toward us — and then out to sea for exactly twelve miles, the government-approved distance. There, they would dump their cargo into the water and, unburdened, return to port.

In 1986, Congress would increase the minimum dumping distance to 106 miles and begin tightening restrictions on what materials — sewage sludge, industrial waste — were permissible to dispose of in the water. Prior to that, however, my Jersey Shore childhood was punctuated by beach closings. Even on days when the green flags flew over the lifeguard bleachers, signaling that the beach was open for business, the water often appeared brown and sudsy. The incoming tide regularly deposited, in addition to the rocks, seaweed, and shells, a heap of man-made junk. We’d hear and pass along stories of unfortunates who’d stepped on syringes and ended up with hepatitis or worse. I still don’t know if there was any truth to these rumors, or whether it was all wholesale, razor-in-the-Halloween-candy legend. What I do know is that one summer we were advised through some official channel to wear socks when walking on the sand. Any fish we caught were not to be eaten.

It wasn’t always this way. In the years between World Wars, the Monmouth County town where I grew up had been a pristine, serene antidote to New York City living. Millionaire Hubert Templeton, president of F.W. Woolworth Co., built his home there. The 52-room mansion later served as Woodrow Wilson’s summer estate. For an antidote to the antidote of serenity, you needed only to travel a few miles south, where the more festive Asbury Park, with its casino and amusement rides and beachfront convention center, hosted half a million vacationers each summer.

We kids of the 70s and 80s didn’t know our place’s history. We just loved the place — yet we sensed that if our slice of the Jersey Shore had ever had a heyday, we’d missed it. By the time we came along, the shore had become a locus of nostalgia, a place perpetually in a process of recovery while, paradoxically, deriving self-definition and even pride from its vacancy and decay. And we knew it. We knew it without knowing we knew it. It’s why we swam in the sudsy ocean and took our sock-wearing in stride. It’s why a fishing pier’s transition to honky-tonk theme park felt more profound and symbolic than the concomitant restoration to the Statue of Liberty twenty or so miles to the north. And it’s why, just a few years later, the fire that leveled that theme park, pier and all, felt like a sad but obligatory chapter in the region’s longer narrative of almosts and might-have-beens.

2.

In her 1956 essay “Place in Fiction,” Eudora Welty makes the hard-to-refute claim that “feelings are all bound up in place.” After moving away from New Jersey at the age of thirty to attend graduate school in the Midwest, I found that the stories I was writing were, among other things, attempts to evoke, or unbind, the feelings of a place I had internalized in my childhood. The book I was writing, beyond relating the stories of individual characters, would tell the story of my particular stretch of the Jersey Shore, a landscape replete with emotional and narrative fruit that seemed abundant, ripe, and all mine.

Then, just as I had finished the manuscript, MTV’s Jersey Shore became the hot center of reality television.

USA Today reports that as many as six different TV networks are currently taking advantage of New Jersey’s “fertile territory for reality TV.” There is Bravo’s Real Housewives of the Jersey Shore and Style’s Jerseylicious and Oxygen’s Jersey Couture and more. But the cornerstone of all this programming is Jersey Shore. Reality television is, we all know by now, a deeply distorting lens, but it nevertheless is a lens looked through in large numbers. Season Two of Jersey Shore routinely attracted over five million viewers per episode. As I finalized revisions to my book, I wondered how readers’ perceptions of the place I had spent years writing about were possibly being shaped by MTV producers and the antics of people named Snooki and The Situation.

Before dismissing this concern out of hand, consider the Deep South. If you haven’t spent much time there, ask yourself what comes to mind when you think about Mississippi. What about Alabama? A writer setting her work in the Deep South must somehow deal with our culture’s near-ubiquitous representation of that region as a place of ignorance and intolerance.

Conversely, many of my beginning creative-writing students from Mississippi, the state in which I now live and work, reveal in their stories their own media-culled impressions of the North. Particularly common is a representation of New York City as an exciting but ultimately soulless metropolis whose opportunities in business and the arts are more than negated by its dearth of personal warmth, neighborliness, and, above all, appreciation of family.

It seemed only fair to conclude that the explosion of Jersey-centered reality TV programming must be having some effect on people’s perceptions about my home state, for better or — I had to assume — worse. I say “assume” because until only recently I’d never actually watched an episode of Jersey Shore, despite having grown up only a handful of miles from the first season’s epicenter, Seaside Heights — a beach, incidentally, that I had never actually set foot on. Even in the 1980s, Seaside Heights was synonymous with hard partying. The same could not be said of me. One spring day in high school, some older kids were going to cut school and drive down there for the day. My parents wouldn’t let me go. That I asked if I could cut school that day tells all you need to know.

When I finally caught a few episodes of Jersey Shore, I found the show to be a perfectly entertaining “who’s angry at and/or hooking up with whom” bit of fluff, despite the profusion of Italian-American stereotypes. As with most reality shows, it reveals scant irony or awareness of its own absurdism. It carries on as if the stakes are always high even when they aren’t.

Yet for a program titled Jersey Shore, the episodes I watched were remarkably nonspecific geographically. Most of the locations — the interior of a house, the interior of a bar, the interior of another bar — could be set anywhere. Yet the term “Jersey Shore,” and all that it implies, evidently mattered enough that the show kept its title in the second season even though a) nearly all its cast hails from New York, and b) it was taped entirely in Florida.

Where Jersey Shore seems to evoke its strongest sense of place is in its transitional flourishes between scenes — a lone seagull, a roller coaster car, slats of a boardwalk — that are edited to look as if the tape were film and the film were old and damaged. Recently, my father had his father’s old home movies converted to DVD, and that’s what these transitional shots were made to look like: faded film from the 1940s, a presumably simpler time when a seagull could catch a crab in peace and there were no screaming amplifiers or random hookups. (There was only a World War.)

At first glance, you could miss these transitional shots entirely. At second glance, they smack of crude manipulation, a direct vein to feelings of nostalgia. But there’s a third glance in which, with these hackneyed beach shots, the show is doing exactly what the actual Jersey Shore itself does so well: promulgating its types, using nostalgia as currency, evoking an idealized past as a legitimate, essential aspect of its identity. This is to say that Jersey Shore — much as I might not want to admit it — does, in fact, capture something truthful about the Jersey Shore.

3.

As I was reading over the page proofs to my story collection, it occurred to me that my Jersey Shore simultaneously has very much and very little to do with the actual Jersey Shore. It’s an amalgam of the real (the granite seawall, a stromboli restaurant called Stuff Yer Face), the altered (rival shopping malls, a beachfront theme park), and the totally fabricated (a prosthetic supply shop, an apartment complex where rabbits talk and babies predict the future). A fictional place might need to seem real, but verisimilitude alone isn’t enough: it also needs to be useful. It needs to have in it all that the story demands, a concept best illustrated not by William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County or Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, but rather by Matt Groening’s town of Springfield, state unknown, home of the Simpsons — a place we perceive as any-town, USA, despite its having a nuclear power plant, harbor, gorge, lighthouse, international airport, and, in one episode, monorail system.

When we set a work of fiction in a real place, we do so hoping that those unfamiliar with the place will come to know it as we do, and that those who already know it will recognize in our depiction something familiar and true. But place’s allegiance in fiction is ultimately to the story, not to its own exactitude. Tobias Wolff, in an interview, makes the easy-to-forget observation that in fiction, all settings — even real ones — are imaginative constructions. “The London of Charles Dickens is not London, it’s a London that is in his mind and his spirit, his way of looking at the world. That’s his London.” He goes on to call the American West his own “mythologized place.” Wolff isn’t pooh-poohing such things as research and exactness, or excusing errors of fact. Rather, he’s reminding us that place in fiction is ultimately a topography not of the physical world but rather of the impressions of the physical world on the writer.

The mere existence of the show Jersey Shore irked me initially because I figured that it would flatten into cliché the place in which my feelings were all bound up. What I failed to grasp was that my mythologized place could never be found on TV, any more than it could be found on a map. That’s because there are as many Jersey Shores — and Londons and American Wests and New Yorks and Mississippis — as there are individual consciousnesses upon which these places leave their lasting impressions. All we can do is tap into memory and the imagination and write the truths that lie there.

*     *      *

Michael Kardos is the author of the novel The Three-Day Affair and the award-winning story collection One Last Good Time. His short stories have appeared in The Southern ReviewCrazyhorsePrairie SchoonerBlackbirdPleiadesPRISM international, and many other magazines and anthologies, and were cited as notable stories in the 2009, 2010, and 2012 editions of Best American Short Stories. Michael grew up on the Jersey Shore, received a degree in music from Princeton University, and played the drums professionally for a number of years. He has an M.F.A. in fiction from The Ohio State University and a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri. He lives in Starkville, Mississippi, where he is an assistant professor of English and co-director of the creative writing program at Mississippi State University.

A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty

Carolyn Brown tells us how she came to write a new biography on Eudora Welty.

My love of Eudora Welty goes back 20 years, to graduate school at UNC-Greensboro, and a class I was taking in literary theory. In that class I was given a very open-ended assignment: take one of the modern literary theories we had studied (Jung, Nietzsche, Derrida, etc.) and apply that theory to an author’s work (any author). Why I chose Welty I do not know, but I took a few of the short stories in A Curtain of Green and The Wide Net and explained that the mystery of Welty’s fiction can be understood as a tension between the Apollonian and Dionysiac visions of the world described in Friedrich Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy. In very simplistic terms, characters like Mrs. Larkin from “A Curtain of Green,” Hazel Wallace in “The Wide Net,” and Howard in “Flowers for Marjorie” seek order (Apollo) amidst the chaos (Dionysos) of their worlds. This graduate school paper was the first article I ever published; it appeared in the 1990 edition of the journal Notes on Mississippi Writers.

Flash forward to 2006. I am married with two children, and my husband gets a job in Jackson. I haven’t thought much about Eudora in the intervening years, but I receive a gift from the company which is wooing my husband to Jackson. It is Suzanne Marrs’ biography of Eudora, newly published and signed by the author! I am overwhelmed. I think, “This company gets it–this is not the standard fruit basket. It’s a wonderful, meaningful gift.” We move to Jackson, and a few months later I am hired by Millsaps and meet the author, Suzanne Marrs.

Since I have lived in Jackson, I have loved seeing the Welty House and Visitors Center grow–moving from Eudora’s garage into the beautiful facility that houses the museum today. I have loved giving tours, making presentations to the docents, and working closely with Suzanne on her books. Living in what I affectionately call “Welty World” reawakened my love of the author and my desire to write about her again.

The idea for the biography grew out of my own enjoyment of reading biographies as a young girl, especially biographies of strong women, as well as being a mother to middle school and high school age boys. It became apparent to me that there was a dearth of biographies in general for middle and high school age students. It’s a wide open field–there are many writers like Welty who have a long scholarly biography devoted to their life and accomplishments, but not a shorter one that offers an introduction to their lives and works. I also believe students and all readers can learn a lot about recent history as Welty’s life closely follows the 20th century arc, and she was closely affected by the major historical events of the century–the depression, World War II, and the civil rights movement. Finally, I believe Mississippi needs more biographies of their famous citizens, which is why I am writing a second one–on Jackson writer Margaret Walker–whose papers, like Welty’s, are archived here and whose life is also a great example from which we can learn. -Carolyn Brown

A signing for Carolyn Brown will be held Wednesday, August 15th at 5:00. A reading will follow at 5:30. Click here for more details.

A Daring Life is published by University Press of Mississippi. Signed copies are available at Lemuria, $20.

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The Human Ache Glows in John Brandon’s A Million Heavens

How wonderful to read such a glowing chunk of prose home-grown from a Southern writer. John Brandon is a master at creating a sense of place in his work. His brand new third novel, A Million Heavens, opens with an exciting sense of a clear-skied desert space in New Mexico, its milieu, and its people. Only, things are a little eerie. The book sets into motion with a cast of people aching on the verge of combustion. Like in Cormac McCarthy’s The Crossing, one is a wolf. A few are musicians, which I love almost as much as wolves. The novel jumps constantly from character to character, entities that move dynamically closer to each other as the novel progresses. But the sense that overarches this narrative is a watercolor dusk over the desert. And, as is implicit on that final blank space after the last page, a dark night full of bright lights follows.

This is a short read—shorter than it looks with the beautiful McSweeney’s hardback cover, and it incidentally appealed to me as a short story lover. Almost every page turn prompts a rotation to a different character’s section and a totally different storyline. About halfway through the book, I became especially fond of this “Reggie” narrative, about a solitary boy in a weird purgatory of a living room with a piano. So I skipped ahead to a few more of his sections to see how much like a short story this one character’s narrative would be. I quickly found out that this is a novel, that there is really some power to this compound narrative. Brandon has crafted a long and textured braid of a story, and in the end, he leaves us with a clear note of resolution—the characters’ infectious aches subtly transforming into a triumphant glow.

Reminds me of: Mary Robison’s quirky organizational style; McCarthy’s serious, careful treatment of characters; Jean-Paul Sartre’s play No Exit; the well-crafted sense of place in Brandon’s own Arkansas and Citrus County.

A Million Heavens by John Brandon, $24, McSweeney’s

by Whitney

The Cove by Ron Rash

A hearty thanks to Sarah Ryburn Mealer, Creative Writing teacher at Jackson Academy for the following guest blog.

I have been a fan of Ron Rash since reading his novel One Foot in Eden, and if there was any reserve in my adoration of his writing, the novel Serena banished it entirely. Although this blog is mostly about his newest novel, The Cove, I must in all good conscience say to you that if you haven’t read One Foot in Eden and Serena please run, don’t walk, to Lemuria right now for all three! Let me explain my sense of urgency and conviction.

Ron Rash is undoubtedly one of the best writers of literary fiction writing and publishing today. I know, I know– you read and/or hear this constantly. It seems that every debut novelist these days almost gratuitously earns the moniker “the most astonishing/vibrant/important new voice in fiction today,” and every published author’s next work is evidence of “a master at the height of his powers.” The phrases may be hackneyed, but in the case of Ron Rash, they are both fit and truthful.

Rash writes in a voice that is astonishing and vibrant, and because he is a master and one of the best contemporary talents in Southern fiction, we need to read his work! One of the things I respect most about his writing is the sheer consistency of its quality. The Cove establishes, as if it needed proving in my mind, that Rash is an author with a gift for more than great story-telling. His narrative style is lyric and poetic, hardly surprising since Rash has published several volumes of poetry in addition to his novels. He is also a teacher of writing, and this experience shows in his attention to detail, his careful crafting of character and situation. More even than this, in his use of setting.

In each of his novels, Rash paints a rich and living portrait of his beloved Appalachia. In The Cove, as in One Foot in Eden and Serena, the landscape is more than setting and takes on the dimension of character in its own right, giving to the novel both rooting in time and place and somehow an other-worldly atmosphere. The Cove is a haunting, almost mythical place, and Rash’s characters have been molded by their own and others’ beliefs about its other-worldliness.

Laurel and Hank Shelton are brother and sister, bound by ties of blood and a shared identity as outsiders. They have grown up in the Cove and on the outskirts of a small Appalachian community steeped in tradition and superstition. As the novel opens, Hank is recently returned from the trenches of World War I. He is now a veteran soldier, wounded in the line of duty, and as such has lost the shroud of suspicion and fear that encircles both the Cove and those who live in it. Hank’s acceptance by the community and his impending marriage introduce a wholly new dimension of loneliness to Laurel’s existence. The appearance of a stranger, himself an outsider and shrouded in mystery, opens for Laurel the possibility of understanding, love, and happiness– experiences she has too rarely encountered in the Cove or what little she has seen of the world beyond it.

Rash’s picture of this insular community, its ignorance and fearfulness, resonates deeply with our world today in the sense that great literature always does transcend time and place. The Cove probes the causes that lead one man to despise another. Laurel’s “birth stain” destines her for isolation and the contempt of her community, but Rash moves quickly beyond surface issues. His tale reveals an intimate portrait of human loneliness and the great, heart-breaking tragedy that arises from those moments when we are unable to accept understanding and compassion for ourselves or to offer it to those around us. These are timely themes for a digital world that moves with lightening speed from one meaningless twitter-bite to the next, often at the cost of real human connection.

Add to the poignancy of his themes the abject beauty of his language. As in his use of setting, Rash’s narrative voice seems richly evocative of time and place. Laurel’s speech runs with lyric grace through the shadows and spots of sunlight in the Cove like the music of the stranger’s flute. It sings with the musical cadence of the Blue Ridge, with turns of phrase like “before full dark” and “kindly of you”– phrases like those a dear friend (another unabashed lover of all things Ron Rash) hears still spoken through childhood memories of her grandparents’ speech “away home” in Tennessee.

Stunning– this is the best word I can imagine to describe these novels. Ron Rash is absolutely one of my favorite authors, so I invite you to experience the magic of his artistry. Read The Cove– read One Foot in Eden and Serena– and we’ll wait together, impatiently, for his next work of art!

Join us on Wednesday, April 18th for a signing and reading with Ron Rash at 5:00 and 5:30.

Good Country People

He looked back into the pail, the water still cloudy but clearing enough to see something else harbored in the bucket’s bottom. He thought it might be his own reflection. Then the water cleared more and what lay in the bucket assumed a round and pale solidity, except for the holes where the eyes had been.

When I first read the above line from the prologue of Ron Rash’s new novel The Cove I immediately had to read it again. Wait a minute, there is a skull in a bucket at the bottom of a well? Did I read that right? Then I had to re-read the whole prologue. It was almost like that line in Deliverance where the arrow seems to appear in the man’s chest. (It turns out Lewis has shot the man from a great distance, and from the back, so the arrow suddenly thrusts out of the man’s chest.) The parallels between Rash and Dickey don’t stop there. One of my personal favorite elements of Rash’s fiction is the language, and as a native of East Tennessee I can tell you that he gets it right, for example:

After Hank left, Laurel washed the cups and dishes and flatware, filled the gray berlin kettle with pole beans and set it on the stove to simmer. She went to the sink, sifted soda powder on her toothbrush and brushed her teeth before she tied her hair back with a crimped hairpin.

As my mother-in-law says, “good country people”.

Ron is a great friend of Lemuria and does a great reading. Hopefully he’ll read from his most recent poetry collection as well.

Join us on Wednesday, April 18th for a signing and reading with Ron Rash at 5:00 and 5:30.

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