Bonus Weekly Reader: A Night In With Audrey Hepburn By Lucy Holliday: A Cute, But Fluffy Chick Lit About Friendship With A Ghostly Movie Star
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: We may have dreams of our favorite celebrities. Sometimes we visualize them falling in love with us and sweeping us off our feet. We may also visualize being best friends with them, spending all night talking about our latest troubles to them. This is especially true of fans of the Golden Age of
Hollywood who see the works of Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Bette Davis, or Humphrey Bogart or others. These older actors had an allure of unapproachable glamour but often played similar characters so often that their fans feel like they know them because they know that character. Lucy Holliday captures those glamorous fantasies in her novel, A Night In With Audrey Hepburn in which a lovelorn failed actress encounters the ghost of her favorite Hollywood Golden Age film star, Audrey Hepburn.
Libby Lomax, an English woman, is the type of out of luck female that often stars in humorous chick lits. She recently lost her job playing an alien extra in a science-fiction tv show after she accidentally sets her alien costume on fire. But not before she catches the eye of the show's hunky star, Dillon O'Hara much to his jealous girlfriend's dismay. She also feels out of place with her stage mom agent mother and her attractive scenery chewing actress sister, Cassandra. So, Libby is a woman who needs a lot of help already before Audrey Hepburn appears on her Chesterfield sofa.
Hepburn is written with the charm and grace of her beloved characters such as Sabrina Fairchild from Sabrina and Holly Golightly from Breakfast at Tiffany's. She is enthusiastic about this new modern world and its inventions such as Libby's espresso maker which amuses Libby. She also grows to love online shopping and Twitter much to Libby's chagrin. (She even sets up her own Twitter account #LittleBlackDressAndPearls) She gives the book the spunk and elfin charm that Hepburn was known for and steals just about every scene that she's in.
She also is fond of giving Libby some solid advice. When Libby talks about her absent father, Hepburn also relates about her own absent father who later was revealed to be a Nazi sympathizer (actual biographical information). She chastises Libby for her shyness and her somewhat plain appearance suggesting that she become more stylish (hence the online shopping). She also encourages to follow her heart and take chances with the men in her life, such as Dillon. Libby's encounters with Hepburn are the highlight of the book.
Unfortunately, Hepburn's passages with Libby completely overshadow the book that the rest of the book pales in comparison with them. There are many chapters where Libby encounters many of the people in her life, particularly her annoying mother and sister and self-centered father, as well as her friends. They are funny and usually involve comedies of errors such as when Libby steps outside of a sauna in nothing but a towel and ends up in an embarrassing Twitter video.
Most of Libby's encounters with the other people in the book are cute, but fluffy. You know that there are going to turn out well despite her embarrassment. Even the book's attempts at seriousness such as discussing Libby's relationship with her distant father end up being non-events (though they do give Libby some much needed Girl Power as she realizes that she could never change her father and not to even bother anymore.)
But there isn't much sparkle to them as there is in the passages with Audrey Hepburn. In fact in the pages without her, this Reader kept hoping that Audrey would show up just to slap some sense into Libby or at least give her a stern but very spunky talking-to. Audrey Hepburn overshadows the book so much that everyone else just seems to be filler.
Some plot points get mentioned but are left dangling such as Libby having a male friend who appears to like her beyond friendship and there seems to be some connection between Audrey Hepburn in life and Libby's Chesterfield sofa that is never fully explained. Holliday wrote two other books in the series which feature Libby's encounters with Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelly so this book no doubt sets up the others to follow. At the very least they should be interesting for the Golden Age of Hollywood stars. Maybe the rest of Holliday's writing could catch up to them.
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Weekly Reader: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead: A Strange But Thrilling Alternate Universe Trip From Bondage To Freedom
Weekly Reader: The Underground Railroad By Colson Whitehead: A Strange But Thrilling Alternate Universe Trip From Bondage To Freedom
By Julie Sara Porter,
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: I must admit as a child when I heard the term "The Underground Railroad," I took it literally. I imagined a literal train underneath the ground in which slaves escaped as freed blacks and white abolitionists conducted the actual trains to the North. Of course the term is figurative and the Underground Railroad was a fascinating history of people both white and black who took chances and saved lives challenging the Fugitive Slave Laws. But I never forgot my earlier naivete about picturing an actual train underground.
Colson Whitehead's thrilling alternate history of the Underground Railroad captured that childhood image by also taking the concept of "The Underground Railroad" literally by making it an actual rail system underground. (In fact one character scoffs at the idea that the term is metaphoric playing off on the Real-world system.) The book details the journey of Cora, an escaped slave as she encounters the Railroad on her journey towards the North into freedom.
Cora escapes with a fellow slave named Caesar, following the path of Cora's mother Mabel, who had earlier escaped without her. On their run to freedom, Cora kills a teenage boy who intends to capture her. Fearing retribution from the white community because of the boy's death, Cora and Caesar encounter an abolitionist who leads them to the first train stop on the Underground Railroad.
The book is exciting and filled with tension as Cora and Caesar encounter various difficulties at each stop. In South Carolina, they learn of a conspiracy to sterilize black women and render black men with syphilis (shades of the infamous Tuskegee Experiments before they appeared in the real timeline in the early 20th century). Before they can escape, the two are separated and Cora travels alone.
In Indiana, Cora encounters a farm run by escaped slaves and freed men. However, the freed men fear retaliation so they alert the slave catchers of the former slaves' presences. Each chapter Cora encounters a new struggle, but manages to escape using her strength, perseverance, and assistance from the Railroad's network of abolitionist, freed blacks, and conductors.
Cora is a three-dimensional protagonist as she makes her way to Freedom. She is fundamentally flawed such as her hatred for her mother who she feels abandoned her. She also is someone who is filled with a deep mistrust of most people, even the ones who are trying to help her, because of earlier abuse and sexual assault during her slavery days. It is to be expected that someone who had been through such a hard time would not find it easy to trust people. As she continues to run towards freedom, Cora also regains some of her faith and trust in others accepting help from those who offer it such as from Martin, a kindly abolitionist who hides her in his attic and Royal, one of the heads of the farming community in Indiana. This is just as much a journey of Cora's self-discovery as it is a run for freedom.
Whitehead also does a brilliant job of capturing other points of view besides Cora by giving other characters their own chapters. These chapters alternate with Cora's journey capturing Caesar and Mabel's less successful escapes than Cora's. (Caesar is killed by an angry mob and Mabel is bitten by a snake.) Whitehead also captures the points of view of white characters such as Ethel, Martin's reluctant wife who nurses Cora through illness and Ridgeway, a slave catcher who is equal parts Uncle Tom's Cabin's Simon Legree and Les Miserable's Inspector Javert. Ridgeway is obsessed with capturing Cora because he is consumed by memories of her mother, the only slave that he failed to catch. He is determined to even the score by capturing Cora and doesn't care how many men he has to sacrifice to do it. His obsession gets the better of him in his final encounter with Cora as she manages to attack him and get away on a push cart.
While The Underground Railroad is an interesting alternate history, some logistics are questionable. (Wouldn't people hear this large train system under their feet giving the whole system away? Aren't people even mildly curious where those mysterious train tracks lead? The book doesn't mention Harriet Tubman, but wouldn't that make her one of the first female train engineers and in this alternate timeline is she as successful as she was in the real timeline that "she was the only conductor who never lost a passenger?") But no matter. The Underground Railroad does what good alternate history is supposed to do. It mentions an intriguing possibility of how history could have played out and gives a brilliant story to surround that possibility.
Classics Corner: I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou: Angelou's Memoir Captures The Beauty, Sadness, Terror, and Strength of Her Youth
Classics Corner: I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou: Angelou's Memoir Captures The Beauty, Sadness, Terror, and Strength of Her Youth
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Maya Angelou's classic memoir I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings is probably the gold standard of childhood memoirs. Angelou recounted a childhood troubled by parental separation, racism, child molestation, sexism, and teenage pregnancy with beauty and intelligence that also defined her career as a poet and Civil Rights activist.
Maya, born Marguerite Johnson (but nicknamed "My" or "Maya" by her older brother, Bailey) recounted her childhood from the time she was three years old when she and her brother were sent to live at their grandmother's home in Stamps, Arkansas to when she was 16 and gave birth to her son, Clyde. Angelou's autobiography is written exclusively from her childhood self in which she is intelligent, shy, insecure, and confused about the world around her.
The book is filled with beautiful descriptions of Angelou's memories. On her and Bailey's arrival in Stamps, she describes the reaction of her grandmother's store (which is the nerve center of Stamps) as "Early in the century, Momma (we soon stopped calling her Grandmother) sold lunches to the sawmen in the lumber yard (east Stamps) and the seedmen at the cotton gin (west Stamps). Her crisp meat pies and cool lemonade when joined to her miraculous ability to be in two places at the same time assured her business success." Using humor and beautiful description, Angelou captures her youth as well as she captured her poetry in a way that enchants and inspires the Reader.
Angelou's grandmother, Annie Henderson, filled a loving presence in Angelou's young life. She writes "(Her grandmother) was undemonstrative in her love but uncompromising in that love. A deep-brooding love hung over everything she touched." "Momma" Henderson was a woman of deep strength and faith. Many of Angelou's strongest memories are of her grandmother taking her to church, introducing her to the various members of the community, and distributing motherly wisdom and advice to Maya and Bailey. She was a true warm and motherly soul that provided comfort for Angelou's dark childhood.
Many of Angelou's darkest childhood memories were caused by those who should have loved and cared for her: her parents. Her father, Bailey Johnson Sr. was a distant presence in young Maya's life. In fact he only appears twice in the book: once to drive his daughter to St. Louis to live with her mother and another time to invite a then-teenage Maya to spend the summer with him and his girlfriend in San Diego (The summer ended with a huge fight between Maya, her father, and his girlfriend resulting in her becoming temporarily homeless.)
As bad a time as Angelou had with her father, the time with her mother was worse. Her mother had
a very glamorous appearance almost like a film star but was very immature and somewhat self-centered, more interested in being buddies with Maya and Bailey than being a mother. This is particularly evident when the children lived with her and her boyfriend in St. Louis. The boyfriend raped 8 year old Maya and threatened to kill Bailey if she tells anyone. The isolation that she felt during the rape and its aftermath is deeply felt as she withdraws into herself unable to trust her mother to protect her.
Maya continued to feel isolated even after the boyfriend was arrested and put to trial. He was released after a year only to be found dead under mysterious circumstances (possibly caused by her uncles). However this does not give Angelou any release as she was rendered mute for five years from the trauma.
Despite the trauma that Angelou endured from her parents, she encounters love and support from her grandmother and brother, Bailey. (Bailey encourages Maya to come forward about the rape despite the threats to his life). But even they can't shield children from racism. Racism is prominently felt throughout the book in different passages that reveal the cruelty of the bigots around Angelou and her family.
Three "powhitetrash" girls mocked and displayed vulgar gestures to Angelou's grandmother. Her disabled Uncle Willie was chased by Ku Klux Klan members only to find safety in a potato and onion bin. A white dentist refused to treat Maya's teeth which Angelou envisions a dramatic confrontation in which Momma Henderson confounds the dentist and makes him change his ways. (In reality she had to remind him of a debt he owed her, but Angelou always liked her version better.) In another passage, a white professor gave a graduation speech which basically tells the mostly black audience that they will never be good at anything but in sports. During his speech, Maya felt ashamed and embarrassed at her race but then became defiant determined to prove him wrong.
The struggles within her family and from the racism outside would lead most people to despair, but Angelou discovered her strength through a love of reading and learning. She writes that William Shakespeare is her "first white love" as she discovered his works at a young age. After that she recognizes the transformation that reading provides for her and a talent for writing. Angelou's writing suggested that her love of reading even proved miraculous at times.
After her selective muteness, Maya bonded with Mrs. Flowers, a Stamps intellectual who offered Maya poems and books to read. This connection to her love of reading, freed Maya from the trauma of her rape and allowed her to read a poem aloud in school.
Maya Angelou's I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings captured a troubled childhood but did so with humor, beauty, and strength found in a love of family and learning. She turned a difficult background into a work of triumph.
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Maya Angelou's classic memoir I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings is probably the gold standard of childhood memoirs. Angelou recounted a childhood troubled by parental separation, racism, child molestation, sexism, and teenage pregnancy with beauty and intelligence that also defined her career as a poet and Civil Rights activist.
Maya, born Marguerite Johnson (but nicknamed "My" or "Maya" by her older brother, Bailey) recounted her childhood from the time she was three years old when she and her brother were sent to live at their grandmother's home in Stamps, Arkansas to when she was 16 and gave birth to her son, Clyde. Angelou's autobiography is written exclusively from her childhood self in which she is intelligent, shy, insecure, and confused about the world around her.
The book is filled with beautiful descriptions of Angelou's memories. On her and Bailey's arrival in Stamps, she describes the reaction of her grandmother's store (which is the nerve center of Stamps) as "Early in the century, Momma (we soon stopped calling her Grandmother) sold lunches to the sawmen in the lumber yard (east Stamps) and the seedmen at the cotton gin (west Stamps). Her crisp meat pies and cool lemonade when joined to her miraculous ability to be in two places at the same time assured her business success." Using humor and beautiful description, Angelou captures her youth as well as she captured her poetry in a way that enchants and inspires the Reader.
Angelou's grandmother, Annie Henderson, filled a loving presence in Angelou's young life. She writes "(Her grandmother) was undemonstrative in her love but uncompromising in that love. A deep-brooding love hung over everything she touched." "Momma" Henderson was a woman of deep strength and faith. Many of Angelou's strongest memories are of her grandmother taking her to church, introducing her to the various members of the community, and distributing motherly wisdom and advice to Maya and Bailey. She was a true warm and motherly soul that provided comfort for Angelou's dark childhood.
Many of Angelou's darkest childhood memories were caused by those who should have loved and cared for her: her parents. Her father, Bailey Johnson Sr. was a distant presence in young Maya's life. In fact he only appears twice in the book: once to drive his daughter to St. Louis to live with her mother and another time to invite a then-teenage Maya to spend the summer with him and his girlfriend in San Diego (The summer ended with a huge fight between Maya, her father, and his girlfriend resulting in her becoming temporarily homeless.)
As bad a time as Angelou had with her father, the time with her mother was worse. Her mother had
a very glamorous appearance almost like a film star but was very immature and somewhat self-centered, more interested in being buddies with Maya and Bailey than being a mother. This is particularly evident when the children lived with her and her boyfriend in St. Louis. The boyfriend raped 8 year old Maya and threatened to kill Bailey if she tells anyone. The isolation that she felt during the rape and its aftermath is deeply felt as she withdraws into herself unable to trust her mother to protect her.
Maya continued to feel isolated even after the boyfriend was arrested and put to trial. He was released after a year only to be found dead under mysterious circumstances (possibly caused by her uncles). However this does not give Angelou any release as she was rendered mute for five years from the trauma.
Despite the trauma that Angelou endured from her parents, she encounters love and support from her grandmother and brother, Bailey. (Bailey encourages Maya to come forward about the rape despite the threats to his life). But even they can't shield children from racism. Racism is prominently felt throughout the book in different passages that reveal the cruelty of the bigots around Angelou and her family.
Three "powhitetrash" girls mocked and displayed vulgar gestures to Angelou's grandmother. Her disabled Uncle Willie was chased by Ku Klux Klan members only to find safety in a potato and onion bin. A white dentist refused to treat Maya's teeth which Angelou envisions a dramatic confrontation in which Momma Henderson confounds the dentist and makes him change his ways. (In reality she had to remind him of a debt he owed her, but Angelou always liked her version better.) In another passage, a white professor gave a graduation speech which basically tells the mostly black audience that they will never be good at anything but in sports. During his speech, Maya felt ashamed and embarrassed at her race but then became defiant determined to prove him wrong.
The struggles within her family and from the racism outside would lead most people to despair, but Angelou discovered her strength through a love of reading and learning. She writes that William Shakespeare is her "first white love" as she discovered his works at a young age. After that she recognizes the transformation that reading provides for her and a talent for writing. Angelou's writing suggested that her love of reading even proved miraculous at times.
After her selective muteness, Maya bonded with Mrs. Flowers, a Stamps intellectual who offered Maya poems and books to read. This connection to her love of reading, freed Maya from the trauma of her rape and allowed her to read a poem aloud in school.
Maya Angelou's I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings captured a troubled childhood but did so with humor, beauty, and strength found in a love of family and learning. She turned a difficult background into a work of triumph.
Monday, February 19, 2018
Weekly Reader: An Elegant Facade by Kristi Ann Hunter: A Brilliant Regency-Era Romance About The Difficulties of Maintaining Perfection
Weekly Reader: An Elegant Façade by Kristi Ann Hunter, A
Brilliant Regency-Era Romance About the Difficulties of Maintaining Perfection
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: The best laid plans of mice, men, and blogger/book reviewers
often go awry. Originally, I was going to review A Night In With Audrey Hepburn
by Lucy Holiday but it was late in arriving via Inter library Loan so I am reviewing
An Elegant Façade. (A Night In With Audrey Hepburn arrived, so I am planning on
making it a bonus Weekly Reader for the coming week.). Anyway, Kristi Ann
Hunter’s Regency-era tribute to the works of Jane Austen makes for a lovely
romantic substitute and is a brilliant novel about a woman doing everything she
can to maintain an air of perfection for fear that she would be seen as flawed.
Lady Georgina Hawthorne can’t wait for her Season in which she
will be presented in English society and be able to hopefully find and catch a
rich titled husband. She and her lady’s maid, Harriett have been preparing for this
moment for a long time. Georgina always makes a point to wear white, so she can
be eye catching to the many gentlemen. She and Harriett pour over the Debrett’s
Peerage to find the most available suitors. Georgina practises where to stand,
how to sit, speak properly. She affects a cold haughty air to those around her,
so they don’t bother to ask her too many questions. She acts like a person with
something to hide.
Because she is a person with something to hide: Georgina is
illiterate. Her whole life is spent hiding this secret even from family members.
When she was younger, Harriett transcribed all of her lessons and interpreted
her schoolwork for her. Georgina and Harriett rise two hours before everyone
else so Harriet can read her mistress her invitations and write letters for
her, without anyone knowing. It’s almost entertaining but sad at the lengths
Georgina goes to cover up her deception.
When she is handed a note, she acts in a frantic way and
tells someone else, “Just read it!” to hide that she couldn’t. A potential
greedy unlikable suitor passes her instructions to meet him and Georgina says
that she refuses to be summoned like a stable hand. Georgina would rather be
perceived as a hysterical incompetent or a haughty bitch than be seen as
someone with an imperfection that she feels would make her an outcast from
society.
Despite her haughty exterior, she catches the eye of Colin
McCrae, a Scottish businessman who has ascended high enough in English society
to be accepted to fine gentry parties, but he is still held under scrutiny. He
has powerful friends that help him enter society like Georgina’s brother, Lord
Trent and Ryland, the Duke of Marshingham and suitor to Georgina’s sister,
Miranda. Ryland is also in the British Secret Service and he and Colin are on
the look for some sinister characters while Ryland disguises himself to court
Miranda. (These subplots are elaborated upon in the previous book, A Noble
Masquerade making the two books meant to take place simultaneously. It is a noble
undertaking for an author, but sometimes annoying for a reader if they haven’t
read the previous book.)
Of course Colin and Georgina engage in byplay and witticisms
in which they annoy each other with Colin’s arrogance and Georgina’s
haughtiness but can’t seem to get each other out of their minds.
However, the two show a great deal of growth and
development. The moment when Colin sees a frantic and tearful Georgina
agonizing over the words in a letter and offers to read it for her is
moving. Also, the compassion and
understanding that he has for how isolated she feels in trying to build this
perfect facade is brilliant.
In Georgina, he also sees qualities he lacks in his own
character. He can’t understand why if Georgina is so close to her family,
particularly her loving siblings, that she keeps her illiteracy a secret from
them. This feeling for honesty towards family, gives him the courage to speak
to his own estranged family particularly his gambler father who ended up losing
the family business. He also opens himself up to looking at Georgina as a
person and not just a spoiled entitled aristocrat.
An Elegant Façade is what’s known as an Inspirational
Romance, in which characters speak of and extol Christian virtues. While there
is some talk about Georgina feeling God cursed her with her affliction and
Colin reads the Bible frequently, it’s not as over-emphasized as it is in other
Inspirational Fiction. Instead, Hunter trusts the Readers to make their own
connections to the themes in the story.
Most importantly Hunter provides the Reader with two
engaging characters in a beautiful nostalgic setting and allows those
characters to change each other along the way.
Classics Corner: Emma by Jane Austen: A Sweet Comedy With A Sometimes Infuriating But Always Well-Meaning Protagonist
Classics Corner: Emma by Jane Austen, A Sweet Comedy With A
Sometimes Infuriating But Always Well-Meaning Protagonist
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: I want to apologize for being so late with these reviews. I
had some personal stuff going on. This past Saturday was my birthday and I’ll
be honest, I’ve been watching the Olympics. (Figure skating’s my jam. Though
I’m an American, I'm happy for Virtue and Moir, their "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Moulin Rouge" performances were awesome. Javier Fernandez was one charming entertainer and totally deserved that
Silver Medal-come on going from Charlie Chaplin to Don Quixote, the man
deserved a prize for showmanship.) Anyway, on to Emma.
Emma Woodhouse is the type of friend who people constantly
criticize but usually end by saying “But she means well.” Okay, she may meddle
in people’s lives, set people up against their will, “But she means well.”
She’s like that popular girl who thinks that the key to her fellow student’s
happiness is a complete makeover and a date with the captain of the football
team, “But she means well.” Jane Austen once described her as a “heroine in
which no one but (herself) would like.” But…well you get the idea.
Emma Woodhouse is determined to match up her friends whether
they want to be or not. Taking pride that she introduced her former governess
(and surrogate mother) to a local wealthy widower, she takes full credit for
the match and thinks that she has a career (as much a career as a woman would
have in Regency-era England) ahead of her of setting up her unattached lovelorn
friends with the right person where they will live, hopefully, ever after.
The first to reach Emma’s Spidey Single Sense is Harriet Smith.
Harriet is a shy young woman with very little to offer any future prospects.
She is illegitimate with unknown parents and is taken in by the charity of
distant relatives. So Emma plans on setting her up with an eligible bachelor
with the determination of an Olympic athlete competing for a Gold medal. (If
Matchmaking were an Olympic sport that is).
First Emma ignores Harriet’s interest in Mr. Martin, a local
farmer, thinking that Harriet could do much better….like the new young curate,
Mr. Elton. Unfortunately, Mr. Elton is a fickle weak minded fool who is looking
for a bride to bring him up a few notches in the social stratosphere. In fact
he is quite receptive to the invitations that Emma sends him to be with herself
and Harriet. He is completely enamored and proposes to…..Emma. Emma has the
sense to turn Elton down and send him packing to find a wealthy but air headed
bride.
Other people get involved in Emma’s attempts at match
making. There’s Frank Churchill, a local boy made good by a wealthy aunt and
uncle and has grown into a snob and a rake. Jane Fairfax, a girl who’s Aunt and
Great-Aunt, Miss and Mrs. Bates, will extol her virtues to everyone who is
unfortunate enough to be in hearing distance. Their praise of Jane sickens the
others, Emma especially, who envision her as the model of perfection.
Emma almost treats her friends like dolls, albeit well-loved
dolls. She thinks that if she positions them just right, insert a few dinner
parties and balls, then they will fall in love just as she suspected. However,
she fails to account that unlike dolls, people don’t always act the way she
wants them to. She falls in love with Frank Churchill. Then when her
infatuation dies, she steps aside for Harriet when she believes the younger
woman is in love with him, only to discover that Churchill had been in a secret
engagement with Jane Fairfax, the whole time. Gee, it’s like her friends are actual human
beings with thoughts of their own and aren’t Emma’s playthings to move however
she sees fit.
The thing with Emma is that she’s not a heartless person.
She genuinely believes that she is acting for the good of all. When she tries
to set Harriet up with Mr. Elton then briefly with Mr. Churchill, she genuinely
wants to see Harriet happy. She doesn’t think about the consequences of whether
the men are interested in Harriet or someone else. The worst that she can be
accused of is thoughtless. When she is filled with remorse (such as after she
realizes that she has hurt Miss Bates’ feelings after she says some thoughtless
words at an outing or when she finds out that Frank Churchill and Jane Fairfax
are engaged and she has to find a way to break the news to Harriet), the Reader
has no doubt that her remorse is genuine. Emma is the type of person that you
may want to lecture, even slap sometimes, but you don’t want to hate or
completely break things off with.
Emma also has a difficult time with following her own
desires. Originally, she is content to remain a spinster and care for her
eccentric father and estate. Perhaps her need to set up her friends is to
ignore or avoid her own feelings. While she admits to being fascinated by the
charming Frank Churchill even engaging in flirting with him, she gets out of
any potential attachments when he proves himself to be vain, foppish, and
overly critical. (She actually pities Jane Fairfax when it is revealed that
they married. But Churchill does show some maturity as he writes and apologetic
letter to Emma and to his father for deceiving them, suggesting some growth in
his character.)
Emma’s own romantic needs become entangled with those of Mr.
Knightly, her brother-in-law. Knightly has the unenviable task of acting as
Emma’s conscience telling her when she’s gone too far. He is offended when she
insults Miss Bates and reminds her that her meddling in Harriet’s life will
only bring trouble to her. Of course Emma never listens and learns the hard
way.
However, like Emma, Mr. Knightly also shows that he is a
caring person. He dances with Harriet at a ball when no one else will earning a
schoolgirl crush from her which is almost thwarted by Emma’s jealousy but Harriet’s
former intended, Mr. Martin appears from nowhere (a plot point left somewhat
dangled) to set things right. When he lectures Emma, it is more out of a blunt
kindness of telling her what she needs to hear rather than playing along with
her schemes like everyone else does. He’s the type of person that someone like
Emma needs, someone to bring them back down to earth before they fly too high
and get themselves in trouble.
Despite Austen’s insistence that no one but herself will
like, Emma actually is very likable. She is packed with flaws and insecurities.
She is extremely meddling, but caring. She gets herself and her friends in
trouble and almost makes a mess of many things. But oh darn it all, she means
well.
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
Lit List: Top Ten Literature for Black History Month
Lit List: Top Ten Literature For Black History Month
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
To honor Black History Month, I have compiled a list of the best literature to recommend for readers to celebrate the legacy of African-American authors and their protagonists many of whom questioned society's restrictions towards them based on class, gender, sexuality, and of course race. Sometimes they were successful, sometimes not so much. But they definitely got Reader's attention and got them talking.
Now for this list I have included one YA novel, one play, and 8 novels. There were some requirements. The most important was that they all had to be written by black authors. They also had to feature a black protagonist. I have nothing against To Kill a Mockingbird or The Adventures of/ Huckleberry Finn. Both are wonderful books that deal with racial issues. However, they are both written by white authors and are told primarily through white characters. There is a huge difference between being an observer of such issues and being a participant and these books, I feel explore those internal struggles better than Mockingbird or Huckleberry do.
You will also noticed two books are left out, even though they are written by African-American women and are personal favorites of mine: The Color Purple by Alice Walker and Beloved by Toni Morrison. Those are two of my all-time favorite novels and I highly recommend them, but I reviewed them quite a bit last year and wanted to read other works by Morrison and Walker. (Both have books that are on this list). However, I would be remiss if I did not recommend them to any potential Readers. If you never have, read them. They are brilliant books with strong female protagonists and deal with racial and gender themes in brilliant ways that explore the solidarity of women and community.
If you know of any others that I miss, please let me know here or on Facebook and as always spoilers may follow.
10. Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor
While Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a YA novel, it has as much to say about the struggles of African-Americans as books with protagonists twice the age of its 9 year old lead character, Cassie Logan.
The segregated Depression era Southern setting is stark, uncomfortable, and unfortunately very real. There are many moments throughout the book that take an unflinching look at the racism that the Logan family encounters, particularly in passages such as when a young white girl and her father throw Cassie on the road and make her call the girl "miss" after Cassie accidentally bumps into her.
Luckily, Cassie is written as a very strong-willed character and gets even with the girl in a very epic manner. There are also moments that show how demeaning the lives of many blacks in the South were such as their school being further from their home than the school for white children and that they have to use older dated textbooks much to their teacher/mother's dismay.
The violent passages such as showing a victim of being tarred and feathered and another who had been burned are disturbing and unforgettable. They show the true impact of racism and how it affects everyone that surrounds them. The ending is purposely left ambiguous as the racist climate will continue to effect the Logan family for generations to come.
9. Go Tell It On the Mountain by James Baldwin
When people attend church services, they never know what goes on in the minds of their fellow church goers, the people who sit in the pews across from them, the choir members, even the pastor. James Baldwin takes an inside look into the minds of an African-American church going family and reveals that all is not sainted nor holy inside. This is a world that Baldwin knew a great deal about since he was the stepson of a Hell Fire and Brimstone pastor and the book is a semi-autobiographical account of his internal struggles between his religion and his homosexuality. The book is filled with religious imagery of Salvation and stories like that of Moses leading his people out of the wilderness (comparing African-Americans to stand against their white oppressors).
John Grimes is the stepson of Rev. Gabriel Grimes, pastor of the storefront Pentecostal Temple of the Fire Baptized. He listens to his stepfather's sermon with a mixture of hatred for his stepfather's abusive nature and desire to win his affections. As the short novel continues, we get not only into John's thoughts but those of his stepfather, mother, and aunt.
Each person in his family is revealed to have a secret that they do not reveal to anyone but themselves which the Narration implies are their sins that they have kept concealed. John's mother, Elizabeth still mourns the loss of his birth father, Richard who killed himself before John was born and married Gabriel more for protection and security than any love. Gabriel, himself, is filled with judgment over his family, parishioners, and the world around him. (He beats his younger son with a belt after the boy had been stabbed.) However he recalls his late first wife, Deborah and mistress, Esther with whom he fathered a child. Gabriel's sister, Florence, also knows about Esther and the child and has been keeping a letter as proof to reveal to Gabriel when the "time is right." In telling the stories of the three Grimes adults and their pasts, Baldwin dares the Readers to see them as deeply flawed human beings who alternate between wanting God's love and fearing God's wrath because of their secrets.
John himself goes through and awakening that is equally spiritual and sexual. He believes that he is filled with the Holy Spirit and sees images of God in some beautiful evocative description. However he is filled with an earthly desire for a fellow male parishioner, Elisha. The inner spiritual warfare between John's quest for religions salvation and his homosexual desire is deeply felt as he feels he cannot come to terms with both, The ending is left purposely ambiguous over which side John chooses. (Though since he is based on Baldwin who wrote other books about his sexuality and criticisms of religion, indicates this is the way John will choose as well.)
8. A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
The title of Lorraine Hansberry's moving Tony nominated play comes from a line in Langston Hughes' poem "Harlem (Dream Deferred)" asking "What happens to a dream deferred/Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?" Her play shows the effects of a dream deferred on an African-American family as they receive their husband and father's life insurance policy.
Each one has different ideas on what to do with it. For Walter Lee Younger, this means he can open up a liquor store with his street-smart friends. For his younger sister, Beneatha, she can continue her education in medical school. Their mother, Lena, wants to buy a house in a white neighborhood.
The conflicts within the family are realistic and tense as the Youngers find their individual paths with the money. Walter Lee's friends abscond with the money leaving him a broken man. Beneatha is torn between two completely different men, one an educated snob and the other who encourages her to embrace her African heritage.
In one memorable scene, a white member of the housing committee visits the Youngers to offer them money not to move to the neighborhood "for their own good and safety" only to receive the brush off by Lena. Walter Lee vows to be a better man by saying that the Youngers are proud of who they are and will be good neighbors. This final scene shows that the Youngers don't know whether they will face racism and tension in their new neighborhood but they will face it together.
7. The Women of Brewster Place by Gloria Naylor
Naylor's novel told in seven short stories tells of the relationships between seven African-American women and how they try to aid each other.
The women are originally written and stand out in their stories. There's Mattie Michael, who acts as den mother to the other women but has her own history of worrying about a son who is on the run from the law. Etta Mae Johnson is an older but feisty woman who doesn't mind dating men half her age. Kiswana Browne, a young woman from a wealthy family who embraces the "Back to Africa" movement and the lower class Brewster Place much to her mother's dismay. Luciella Louise Turner wants to keep her no-good boyfriend in her life to the point of injuring herself. Cora Lee is a single mother of a mob of unruly children who could learn some discipline (and so could she). Lorraine and Therese are a lesbian couple who move to Brewster Place to seek acceptance but instead get the worst kind of bigotry possible. In their stories, Naylor characterizes each woman with her strengths, frailties, and individuality making them fascinating characters.
Besides their individuality, Naylor also explores their connections to each other and how each woman reaches out to the others for friendship, understanding, and maybe a chance to change her life for the better. When Mattie is on the run from her abusive father, she is taken in by Luciella's grandmother. Mattie then returns the favor by helping Luciella through her crises with her boyfriend. Etta Mae stands up for Lorraine and Therese when a nosey neighbor judges them in a meeting. Kiswana invites Cora Lee's children to a street performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream which inspires one of the kids to become a writer.
The connections bring the women together as a whole. This is particularly meaningful in the final chapters when it is revealed that the characters moved on and Brewster Place got swallowed up and gerrymandered into other names. Even though Brewster Place is gone, Naylor's characters still have their memories of community.
6. Native Son by Richard Wright
Bigger Thomas is one of many protagonists like Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov: a protagonist who commits murder but instead of judging or censoring him, the writing goes into the societal implications. What causes a man like Raskolnikov or Bigger Thomas to commit a crime? In the case of Bigger, his author Richard Wright asks the question of how much race plays a part in Bigger's crime, his cover up of the crime, his arrest, and trial.
Until he accidentally murders wealthy white Mary Dalton, Bigger could never articulate what he feels. He feels isolated because of the prejudice from white society and trapped by the needs of his impoverished family. He works as a chauffeur for the Dalton family but feels condescended and mocked by their acts of kindness particularly from Mary who is an active member of the Communist party with her boyfriend, Jan. Since he had never felt anything but fear, hatred, and derision from white people, he feels the same for them. He acts subservient and says "yesum", taking them wherever they want, while gritting his teeth inside. One night after a drunken encounter with Mary and Jan, Bigger brings Mary upstairs and accidentally suffocates her.
The passages following the murder are Poe-esque as Bigger recruits his girlfriend, Bessie, to write a ransom note signed by the local Communist party in an attempt to frame Jan for the murder. It is spine-tingling and somewhat gruesomely entertaining as Bigger plays on the white characters' prejudices by feigning ignorance so they would believe that he was not clever enough to commit the murder. He feels confident enough to stay ahead of the police until he is unable to collect the ransom money to leave town and he kills Bessie in another moment of panic eventually leading to his pursuit and capture. (In pages that are all-too-real in these days of media exploitation of crimes particularly ones that fall in "Missing White Woman Syndrome" categories, Bigger is charged for Mary's death but very little mention is made towards Bessie's.)
The final third of Native Son deals with Bigger's trial and the words of his defense attorney, Boris Max who lays out the themes for the jury and the Reader to learn. While Max's speech is long, it is gripping as it challenges that Bigger's fear and hatred towards white people, and accidental murder of Mary was a learned trait: brought on by white society's fear and hatred of him. The writing suggests that Bigger Thomas was not born, he was made. That we all created Bigger Thomas and all of the Bigger Thomases before and since.
5. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
Invisible Man is a deeply analytical and thought-provoking novel about an unnamed African-American man who must face his metaphoric invisibility as a victim of racism, social conflict, and the judgments and prejudices of others.
From the unforgettable first chapter where the Narrator is made to participate in a grueling Battle Royale for the amusement of white patrons, he discovers that he is used and betrayed by the people around him. It's heartbreaking as he goes throughout his life manipulated and made a fool of by people around him. Even when he obtains some success such as at an all-black college, eventually his happiness collapses such as when he is expelled after taking one of the founders on a detour of the seedier side of town (thought it was at the request of the founder and not his idea).
The Narrator spends a great deal of time with a group known as the Brotherhood, an organization that seems a composite of socialist/anarchists. He gains some success as a spokesperson on their behalf in Harlem. But disillusionment sets in when another African-American member of the Brotherhood is shot while trying to resist arrest and the Narrator makes a stirring speech on the rights of African-Americans (much to the Brotherhood's objection). Disillusionment turns to hatred when riots start in Harlem and the Narrator realizes that was the Brotherhood's plan all along.
The strongest statement in the book is made when the Invisible Man decides to no longer be invisible, to speak and fight for himself. He ends the book provocatively by daring the Reader to confront their own invisibility by saying "Who knows but that on the lower frequencies, I speak for you."
4. Kindred by Octavia Butler
You can never know what the past is like unless you've actually been there. Edana "Dana" Franklin learns that lesson as she travels back and forth between her 1976 home with her Caucasian husband, Kevin and the antebellum South where she is mistaken and treated like a slave.
Dana suffers frequent dizzy spells and when she recovers from them, she finds herself in the presence of Rufus Weylin, the son of a plantation owner and is later revealed to be Dana's ancestor. Each time that Dana arrives, it is to help Rufus out of some difficulty. Once it is to save him from drowning, another time, she finds him drunk in an alley and so on. The multiple times of saving Rufus' life does not endear her in the eyes of his parents who have her whipped, and especially Rufus' father who gives Dana very uncomfortable stares. She also encounters Rufus' future mistress, a free black woman, Alice whom Dana is determined to protect until she gives birth to Alice and Rufus' daughter, Hagar.
Dana is a very well developed character as she goes from the past to the present and her interactions with others. Her relationship with Rufus for example is one of concern mixed with hatred. He alternates between needing Dana as a mother figure and seeing her as property. She is also held under suspicion by the black characters particularly Alice, who at first refused to be Rufus' concubine and instead wants to run away with her husband. Alice's husband, Isaac is beaten and sold sending Alice reluctantly into Rufus' protection. Then there's Kevin, Dana's modern-day husband who at first is very condescending not believing her time travel stories until he encounters them himself.
One of the themes that plays into the narrative is the idea of home. The further Dana goes in time, the longer she stays there. In the first chapter, she is only in the past for a few hours and returns after a few seconds. Later she spends months in the past and is gone for hours. The longest time between the past and present belongs not to Dana, but to her husband Kevin. Even though he's gone for eight days (and can only return when Dana goes back to the past to retrieve him), for Kevin he has been in the past for five years: long enough for him to travel to the North and become an abolitionist/teacher. Each time Kevin and Dana return to the present, they have momentary culture shock from the modern conveniences and question their lives in the present and their marriage. (Dana worries that with Kevin in the past, his thoughts may conform to those of the white men he encounters. When he returns at first she's skeptical with whether he became an abolitionist, which he tells her of course he did.) When they travel between time, they aren't sure where their home actually is and still suffer from the memories of the past. This is revealed in the end when Dana is injured in the past and the injury carries over to her return. A part of her will always be in the past scarred by her experience as a slave.
3. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
Hurston's brilliant short novel is about a woman who discovers herself and her own strength from her marriages to three different men.
Janie Crawford begins life unsure of herself even her own skin (She recalls having a picture taken with white children and confused that she couldn't see herself not knowing that she was different from the other children inspiring their mockery at her naivete). As Janie grows that insecurity manifests in her relationships with men as her grandmother arranges her first marriage to an older man, Logan Killick.
Janie's marriage to Logan doesn't last long as she's tired of being a drudge and playing second fiddle to Logan's late first wife. She divorces him and marries Jody Starks, a charming drifter who becomes mayor of a small town. At first her life as First Lady of Jody's town of Green Cove Springs is pleasant, but Jody verbally abuses her and forces the townspeople to do hard physical labor. Janie endures her unhappy marriage for 20 years until as Jody is dying she curses him with all the hurt he gave her over the years.
At age 40, Janie marries her third husband Vergible Woods AKA Tea Cake, a much younger man. Recognizing her own sexual desires, Janie elopes with Tea Cake to the Everglades. It is in her marriage to Tea Cake that Janie is able to find the strength to stand up as an independent woman and no longer take the abuse that the men in her life have given her.
2. Sula by Toni Morrison
Sula tells the story of two women who on the surface appear to be polar opposites, but they are revealed to be very similar.
Nel and Sula grow up in the town of Bottom, Ohio and have very different backgrounds. Nel's family is very rigid conservative home that is only livened by her occasional visits to her maternal grandmother, Rochelle, a prostitute. Sula lives in a boarding house with her mother and grandmother neither of which were married when they had their children and a regular stream of male boarders including three men they call "the deweys."
As they age, their paths continue to diverge as Nel marries young and has children and Sula leaves town only to return with a bad reputation of having many men. Nel welcomes her friend-that is until Sula runs off with her husband causing Nel to reevaluate her friendship with Sula.
At first Sula seems like the bad girl and Nel seems like the good girl, but Morrison's excellent writing makes their lines not so defined. This is exemplified in a passage in which Sula accidentally kills a neighbor boy. While Nel blames Sula solely for the tragedy, Sula's elderly grandmother reminds Nel that she watched it happen and did nothing to stop it nor did she tell anyone about it, so Nel was just as much to blame as Sula. Nel also realizes that she was as much to blame in the decline of her marriage as Sula. Morrison shows that there is bad and good within everyone and sometimes those who pass judgment on those who do wrong are just as capable of it themselves.
1. The Temple of My Familiar by Alice Walker
We carry our personal history and the history of our people with us is the main theme of Alice Walker's multi-narrative epic novel The Temple of My Familiar. This novel tells the story of a group of people who are interwoven by their current links to each other and their past histories which tell of many generations of oppression, conflict, struggles, and migration.
The Temple of My Familiar has a large cast many of whom are connected in unusual ways. There is Carlotta, a beautiful Latin American woman whose flamboyant rocker husband, Arveyda ran off with her mother, Zede. Carlotta is also having an affair with Suwelo, a college professor who is in a troubled marriage with his wife, Fanny whose grandmother is none other than Celie, the protagonist of Walker's The Color Purple (I couldn't get too far away from this book.) Suwelo becomes close friends with an older couple, Hal and Miss Lissie who give him information not only about his past but the history of his people.
Each of the characters relates their stories in various chapters. There is no fluid plot so much as it is a series of interconnected stories about each person's past and their heritage. Zede's story for example tells of her history of fleeing a tempestuous political climate to America and then her return to rediscover her roots as well as her artistry in "sewing magic" which she inherited. While she tells her story, Arveyda also recounts his troubled relationship with his parents and his own questions towards his lineage particularly his fascination with his Native American roots. Fanny and her mother, Olivia tell of their relationship with Celie and Olivia's "other mother", Shug Avery that had been built on the former's abuse from her husband. (A horrible incident between Celie and a dog suggests that the abuse may not have been as far from Celie's mind as she thought).
By far the most interesting storyteller is the most fascinating character in the bunch: Miss Lissie. Lissie possesses an almost goddess-like presence as she recalls all of her former lives with a strong recall that goes beyond time and place. She captivates Suwelo, and The Reader with her memories of the distant past of her lives-mostly as black women, but sometimes as white men, and once as a lioness with aplomb. She recalls her past life in pre-historic Africa during the creation of fire all the way to slavery times mirroring the experiences of the African people and their eventual connections to America. They are particularly strong in their spiritual feelings of the early Goddess worship and the concept of a Mother Land.
Lissie compares the early idyllic life of a matriarchal society that worshiped a Goddess and its transformation to a war-like patriarchal society to a monster. This comparison is made stronger when she compares slavery to a Gorgon (Medusa) and the rebellion of the slaves against their masters as the fury of a dark vengeance seeking Goddess. This comparison implies the Goddess who had been turned over has finally sought her revenge against those who overpowered her and that she will always protect her children no matter where they are.
Lissie's memories inspire Suwelo to look at his life more closely and to reconcile with Fanny causing further reconciliations between Carlotta, Arveyda, and Zede. As Walker's characters learn from their pasts, they form a circle that connects them to a shared history not only theirs but a shared history of all people.
Honorable Mention:
Novels: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, Behold the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue, Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, Dear America: I Thought My Soul Would Rise and Fly: The Diary of Patsy, A Freed Girl by Joyce Hanson, Bud, Not Buddy and The Watsons Go To Birmingham by Christopher Paul Curtis, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, A Visitation of Spirits by Randall Kenan, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, White Teeth and Swing Time by Zadie Smith
Non-Fiction: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass, Up From Slavery by Booker T. Washington, Incidents in the Life of A Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs, And Arn't I A Woman by Sojourner Truth, The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou, The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Malcolm X and Alex Haley, Roots: The Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley, Letter From Birmingham Jail, I Have a Dream, and Other Writings by Martin Luther King Jr., On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madame C.J. Walker by A'leila Bundles, Hidden Figures: The Untold Story of The Black Women Who Helped Win the Space Race by Margot Lee Shetterley, Through My Eyes by Ruby Bridges, We Were 8 Years in Poweer by Na-Hishi Coates, Dreams of My Father and The Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
Plays: Fences and The Piano Lesson by August Wilson, for colored girls who considered suicide when the rainbow is enuf by Notzake Shange, Twilight: Los Angeles 1992 by Anna Deavere Smith, The Colored Museum by George C. Wolfe
Poems and Short Story Authors: Phyllis Wheatley, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucille Clifton, Maya Angelou, bell hooks, Rita Dove, Dudley Randall, Elizabeth Alexander, June Jordan, Quincy Troupe, Amiri Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Audre Lorde
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
To honor Black History Month, I have compiled a list of the best literature to recommend for readers to celebrate the legacy of African-American authors and their protagonists many of whom questioned society's restrictions towards them based on class, gender, sexuality, and of course race. Sometimes they were successful, sometimes not so much. But they definitely got Reader's attention and got them talking.
Now for this list I have included one YA novel, one play, and 8 novels. There were some requirements. The most important was that they all had to be written by black authors. They also had to feature a black protagonist. I have nothing against To Kill a Mockingbird or The Adventures of/ Huckleberry Finn. Both are wonderful books that deal with racial issues. However, they are both written by white authors and are told primarily through white characters. There is a huge difference between being an observer of such issues and being a participant and these books, I feel explore those internal struggles better than Mockingbird or Huckleberry do.
You will also noticed two books are left out, even though they are written by African-American women and are personal favorites of mine: The Color Purple by Alice Walker and Beloved by Toni Morrison. Those are two of my all-time favorite novels and I highly recommend them, but I reviewed them quite a bit last year and wanted to read other works by Morrison and Walker. (Both have books that are on this list). However, I would be remiss if I did not recommend them to any potential Readers. If you never have, read them. They are brilliant books with strong female protagonists and deal with racial and gender themes in brilliant ways that explore the solidarity of women and community.
If you know of any others that I miss, please let me know here or on Facebook and as always spoilers may follow.
10. Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor
While Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a YA novel, it has as much to say about the struggles of African-Americans as books with protagonists twice the age of its 9 year old lead character, Cassie Logan.
The segregated Depression era Southern setting is stark, uncomfortable, and unfortunately very real. There are many moments throughout the book that take an unflinching look at the racism that the Logan family encounters, particularly in passages such as when a young white girl and her father throw Cassie on the road and make her call the girl "miss" after Cassie accidentally bumps into her.
Luckily, Cassie is written as a very strong-willed character and gets even with the girl in a very epic manner. There are also moments that show how demeaning the lives of many blacks in the South were such as their school being further from their home than the school for white children and that they have to use older dated textbooks much to their teacher/mother's dismay.
The violent passages such as showing a victim of being tarred and feathered and another who had been burned are disturbing and unforgettable. They show the true impact of racism and how it affects everyone that surrounds them. The ending is purposely left ambiguous as the racist climate will continue to effect the Logan family for generations to come.
9. Go Tell It On the Mountain by James Baldwin
When people attend church services, they never know what goes on in the minds of their fellow church goers, the people who sit in the pews across from them, the choir members, even the pastor. James Baldwin takes an inside look into the minds of an African-American church going family and reveals that all is not sainted nor holy inside. This is a world that Baldwin knew a great deal about since he was the stepson of a Hell Fire and Brimstone pastor and the book is a semi-autobiographical account of his internal struggles between his religion and his homosexuality. The book is filled with religious imagery of Salvation and stories like that of Moses leading his people out of the wilderness (comparing African-Americans to stand against their white oppressors).
John Grimes is the stepson of Rev. Gabriel Grimes, pastor of the storefront Pentecostal Temple of the Fire Baptized. He listens to his stepfather's sermon with a mixture of hatred for his stepfather's abusive nature and desire to win his affections. As the short novel continues, we get not only into John's thoughts but those of his stepfather, mother, and aunt.
Each person in his family is revealed to have a secret that they do not reveal to anyone but themselves which the Narration implies are their sins that they have kept concealed. John's mother, Elizabeth still mourns the loss of his birth father, Richard who killed himself before John was born and married Gabriel more for protection and security than any love. Gabriel, himself, is filled with judgment over his family, parishioners, and the world around him. (He beats his younger son with a belt after the boy had been stabbed.) However he recalls his late first wife, Deborah and mistress, Esther with whom he fathered a child. Gabriel's sister, Florence, also knows about Esther and the child and has been keeping a letter as proof to reveal to Gabriel when the "time is right." In telling the stories of the three Grimes adults and their pasts, Baldwin dares the Readers to see them as deeply flawed human beings who alternate between wanting God's love and fearing God's wrath because of their secrets.
John himself goes through and awakening that is equally spiritual and sexual. He believes that he is filled with the Holy Spirit and sees images of God in some beautiful evocative description. However he is filled with an earthly desire for a fellow male parishioner, Elisha. The inner spiritual warfare between John's quest for religions salvation and his homosexual desire is deeply felt as he feels he cannot come to terms with both, The ending is left purposely ambiguous over which side John chooses. (Though since he is based on Baldwin who wrote other books about his sexuality and criticisms of religion, indicates this is the way John will choose as well.)
8. A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
The title of Lorraine Hansberry's moving Tony nominated play comes from a line in Langston Hughes' poem "Harlem (Dream Deferred)" asking "What happens to a dream deferred/Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?" Her play shows the effects of a dream deferred on an African-American family as they receive their husband and father's life insurance policy.
Each one has different ideas on what to do with it. For Walter Lee Younger, this means he can open up a liquor store with his street-smart friends. For his younger sister, Beneatha, she can continue her education in medical school. Their mother, Lena, wants to buy a house in a white neighborhood.
The conflicts within the family are realistic and tense as the Youngers find their individual paths with the money. Walter Lee's friends abscond with the money leaving him a broken man. Beneatha is torn between two completely different men, one an educated snob and the other who encourages her to embrace her African heritage.
In one memorable scene, a white member of the housing committee visits the Youngers to offer them money not to move to the neighborhood "for their own good and safety" only to receive the brush off by Lena. Walter Lee vows to be a better man by saying that the Youngers are proud of who they are and will be good neighbors. This final scene shows that the Youngers don't know whether they will face racism and tension in their new neighborhood but they will face it together.
7. The Women of Brewster Place by Gloria Naylor
Naylor's novel told in seven short stories tells of the relationships between seven African-American women and how they try to aid each other.
The women are originally written and stand out in their stories. There's Mattie Michael, who acts as den mother to the other women but has her own history of worrying about a son who is on the run from the law. Etta Mae Johnson is an older but feisty woman who doesn't mind dating men half her age. Kiswana Browne, a young woman from a wealthy family who embraces the "Back to Africa" movement and the lower class Brewster Place much to her mother's dismay. Luciella Louise Turner wants to keep her no-good boyfriend in her life to the point of injuring herself. Cora Lee is a single mother of a mob of unruly children who could learn some discipline (and so could she). Lorraine and Therese are a lesbian couple who move to Brewster Place to seek acceptance but instead get the worst kind of bigotry possible. In their stories, Naylor characterizes each woman with her strengths, frailties, and individuality making them fascinating characters.
Besides their individuality, Naylor also explores their connections to each other and how each woman reaches out to the others for friendship, understanding, and maybe a chance to change her life for the better. When Mattie is on the run from her abusive father, she is taken in by Luciella's grandmother. Mattie then returns the favor by helping Luciella through her crises with her boyfriend. Etta Mae stands up for Lorraine and Therese when a nosey neighbor judges them in a meeting. Kiswana invites Cora Lee's children to a street performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream which inspires one of the kids to become a writer.
The connections bring the women together as a whole. This is particularly meaningful in the final chapters when it is revealed that the characters moved on and Brewster Place got swallowed up and gerrymandered into other names. Even though Brewster Place is gone, Naylor's characters still have their memories of community.
6. Native Son by Richard Wright
Bigger Thomas is one of many protagonists like Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov: a protagonist who commits murder but instead of judging or censoring him, the writing goes into the societal implications. What causes a man like Raskolnikov or Bigger Thomas to commit a crime? In the case of Bigger, his author Richard Wright asks the question of how much race plays a part in Bigger's crime, his cover up of the crime, his arrest, and trial.
Until he accidentally murders wealthy white Mary Dalton, Bigger could never articulate what he feels. He feels isolated because of the prejudice from white society and trapped by the needs of his impoverished family. He works as a chauffeur for the Dalton family but feels condescended and mocked by their acts of kindness particularly from Mary who is an active member of the Communist party with her boyfriend, Jan. Since he had never felt anything but fear, hatred, and derision from white people, he feels the same for them. He acts subservient and says "yesum", taking them wherever they want, while gritting his teeth inside. One night after a drunken encounter with Mary and Jan, Bigger brings Mary upstairs and accidentally suffocates her.
The passages following the murder are Poe-esque as Bigger recruits his girlfriend, Bessie, to write a ransom note signed by the local Communist party in an attempt to frame Jan for the murder. It is spine-tingling and somewhat gruesomely entertaining as Bigger plays on the white characters' prejudices by feigning ignorance so they would believe that he was not clever enough to commit the murder. He feels confident enough to stay ahead of the police until he is unable to collect the ransom money to leave town and he kills Bessie in another moment of panic eventually leading to his pursuit and capture. (In pages that are all-too-real in these days of media exploitation of crimes particularly ones that fall in "Missing White Woman Syndrome" categories, Bigger is charged for Mary's death but very little mention is made towards Bessie's.)
The final third of Native Son deals with Bigger's trial and the words of his defense attorney, Boris Max who lays out the themes for the jury and the Reader to learn. While Max's speech is long, it is gripping as it challenges that Bigger's fear and hatred towards white people, and accidental murder of Mary was a learned trait: brought on by white society's fear and hatred of him. The writing suggests that Bigger Thomas was not born, he was made. That we all created Bigger Thomas and all of the Bigger Thomases before and since.
5. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
Invisible Man is a deeply analytical and thought-provoking novel about an unnamed African-American man who must face his metaphoric invisibility as a victim of racism, social conflict, and the judgments and prejudices of others.
From the unforgettable first chapter where the Narrator is made to participate in a grueling Battle Royale for the amusement of white patrons, he discovers that he is used and betrayed by the people around him. It's heartbreaking as he goes throughout his life manipulated and made a fool of by people around him. Even when he obtains some success such as at an all-black college, eventually his happiness collapses such as when he is expelled after taking one of the founders on a detour of the seedier side of town (thought it was at the request of the founder and not his idea).
The Narrator spends a great deal of time with a group known as the Brotherhood, an organization that seems a composite of socialist/anarchists. He gains some success as a spokesperson on their behalf in Harlem. But disillusionment sets in when another African-American member of the Brotherhood is shot while trying to resist arrest and the Narrator makes a stirring speech on the rights of African-Americans (much to the Brotherhood's objection). Disillusionment turns to hatred when riots start in Harlem and the Narrator realizes that was the Brotherhood's plan all along.
The strongest statement in the book is made when the Invisible Man decides to no longer be invisible, to speak and fight for himself. He ends the book provocatively by daring the Reader to confront their own invisibility by saying "Who knows but that on the lower frequencies, I speak for you."
4. Kindred by Octavia Butler
You can never know what the past is like unless you've actually been there. Edana "Dana" Franklin learns that lesson as she travels back and forth between her 1976 home with her Caucasian husband, Kevin and the antebellum South where she is mistaken and treated like a slave.
Dana suffers frequent dizzy spells and when she recovers from them, she finds herself in the presence of Rufus Weylin, the son of a plantation owner and is later revealed to be Dana's ancestor. Each time that Dana arrives, it is to help Rufus out of some difficulty. Once it is to save him from drowning, another time, she finds him drunk in an alley and so on. The multiple times of saving Rufus' life does not endear her in the eyes of his parents who have her whipped, and especially Rufus' father who gives Dana very uncomfortable stares. She also encounters Rufus' future mistress, a free black woman, Alice whom Dana is determined to protect until she gives birth to Alice and Rufus' daughter, Hagar.
Dana is a very well developed character as she goes from the past to the present and her interactions with others. Her relationship with Rufus for example is one of concern mixed with hatred. He alternates between needing Dana as a mother figure and seeing her as property. She is also held under suspicion by the black characters particularly Alice, who at first refused to be Rufus' concubine and instead wants to run away with her husband. Alice's husband, Isaac is beaten and sold sending Alice reluctantly into Rufus' protection. Then there's Kevin, Dana's modern-day husband who at first is very condescending not believing her time travel stories until he encounters them himself.
One of the themes that plays into the narrative is the idea of home. The further Dana goes in time, the longer she stays there. In the first chapter, she is only in the past for a few hours and returns after a few seconds. Later she spends months in the past and is gone for hours. The longest time between the past and present belongs not to Dana, but to her husband Kevin. Even though he's gone for eight days (and can only return when Dana goes back to the past to retrieve him), for Kevin he has been in the past for five years: long enough for him to travel to the North and become an abolitionist/teacher. Each time Kevin and Dana return to the present, they have momentary culture shock from the modern conveniences and question their lives in the present and their marriage. (Dana worries that with Kevin in the past, his thoughts may conform to those of the white men he encounters. When he returns at first she's skeptical with whether he became an abolitionist, which he tells her of course he did.) When they travel between time, they aren't sure where their home actually is and still suffer from the memories of the past. This is revealed in the end when Dana is injured in the past and the injury carries over to her return. A part of her will always be in the past scarred by her experience as a slave.
3. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
Hurston's brilliant short novel is about a woman who discovers herself and her own strength from her marriages to three different men.
Janie Crawford begins life unsure of herself even her own skin (She recalls having a picture taken with white children and confused that she couldn't see herself not knowing that she was different from the other children inspiring their mockery at her naivete). As Janie grows that insecurity manifests in her relationships with men as her grandmother arranges her first marriage to an older man, Logan Killick.
Janie's marriage to Logan doesn't last long as she's tired of being a drudge and playing second fiddle to Logan's late first wife. She divorces him and marries Jody Starks, a charming drifter who becomes mayor of a small town. At first her life as First Lady of Jody's town of Green Cove Springs is pleasant, but Jody verbally abuses her and forces the townspeople to do hard physical labor. Janie endures her unhappy marriage for 20 years until as Jody is dying she curses him with all the hurt he gave her over the years.
At age 40, Janie marries her third husband Vergible Woods AKA Tea Cake, a much younger man. Recognizing her own sexual desires, Janie elopes with Tea Cake to the Everglades. It is in her marriage to Tea Cake that Janie is able to find the strength to stand up as an independent woman and no longer take the abuse that the men in her life have given her.
2. Sula by Toni Morrison
Sula tells the story of two women who on the surface appear to be polar opposites, but they are revealed to be very similar.
Nel and Sula grow up in the town of Bottom, Ohio and have very different backgrounds. Nel's family is very rigid conservative home that is only livened by her occasional visits to her maternal grandmother, Rochelle, a prostitute. Sula lives in a boarding house with her mother and grandmother neither of which were married when they had their children and a regular stream of male boarders including three men they call "the deweys."
As they age, their paths continue to diverge as Nel marries young and has children and Sula leaves town only to return with a bad reputation of having many men. Nel welcomes her friend-that is until Sula runs off with her husband causing Nel to reevaluate her friendship with Sula.
At first Sula seems like the bad girl and Nel seems like the good girl, but Morrison's excellent writing makes their lines not so defined. This is exemplified in a passage in which Sula accidentally kills a neighbor boy. While Nel blames Sula solely for the tragedy, Sula's elderly grandmother reminds Nel that she watched it happen and did nothing to stop it nor did she tell anyone about it, so Nel was just as much to blame as Sula. Nel also realizes that she was as much to blame in the decline of her marriage as Sula. Morrison shows that there is bad and good within everyone and sometimes those who pass judgment on those who do wrong are just as capable of it themselves.
1. The Temple of My Familiar by Alice Walker
We carry our personal history and the history of our people with us is the main theme of Alice Walker's multi-narrative epic novel The Temple of My Familiar. This novel tells the story of a group of people who are interwoven by their current links to each other and their past histories which tell of many generations of oppression, conflict, struggles, and migration.
The Temple of My Familiar has a large cast many of whom are connected in unusual ways. There is Carlotta, a beautiful Latin American woman whose flamboyant rocker husband, Arveyda ran off with her mother, Zede. Carlotta is also having an affair with Suwelo, a college professor who is in a troubled marriage with his wife, Fanny whose grandmother is none other than Celie, the protagonist of Walker's The Color Purple (I couldn't get too far away from this book.) Suwelo becomes close friends with an older couple, Hal and Miss Lissie who give him information not only about his past but the history of his people.
Each of the characters relates their stories in various chapters. There is no fluid plot so much as it is a series of interconnected stories about each person's past and their heritage. Zede's story for example tells of her history of fleeing a tempestuous political climate to America and then her return to rediscover her roots as well as her artistry in "sewing magic" which she inherited. While she tells her story, Arveyda also recounts his troubled relationship with his parents and his own questions towards his lineage particularly his fascination with his Native American roots. Fanny and her mother, Olivia tell of their relationship with Celie and Olivia's "other mother", Shug Avery that had been built on the former's abuse from her husband. (A horrible incident between Celie and a dog suggests that the abuse may not have been as far from Celie's mind as she thought).
By far the most interesting storyteller is the most fascinating character in the bunch: Miss Lissie. Lissie possesses an almost goddess-like presence as she recalls all of her former lives with a strong recall that goes beyond time and place. She captivates Suwelo, and The Reader with her memories of the distant past of her lives-mostly as black women, but sometimes as white men, and once as a lioness with aplomb. She recalls her past life in pre-historic Africa during the creation of fire all the way to slavery times mirroring the experiences of the African people and their eventual connections to America. They are particularly strong in their spiritual feelings of the early Goddess worship and the concept of a Mother Land.
Lissie compares the early idyllic life of a matriarchal society that worshiped a Goddess and its transformation to a war-like patriarchal society to a monster. This comparison is made stronger when she compares slavery to a Gorgon (Medusa) and the rebellion of the slaves against their masters as the fury of a dark vengeance seeking Goddess. This comparison implies the Goddess who had been turned over has finally sought her revenge against those who overpowered her and that she will always protect her children no matter where they are.
Lissie's memories inspire Suwelo to look at his life more closely and to reconcile with Fanny causing further reconciliations between Carlotta, Arveyda, and Zede. As Walker's characters learn from their pasts, they form a circle that connects them to a shared history not only theirs but a shared history of all people.
Honorable Mention:
Novels: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, Behold the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue, Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, Dear America: I Thought My Soul Would Rise and Fly: The Diary of Patsy, A Freed Girl by Joyce Hanson, Bud, Not Buddy and The Watsons Go To Birmingham by Christopher Paul Curtis, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, A Visitation of Spirits by Randall Kenan, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, White Teeth and Swing Time by Zadie Smith
Non-Fiction: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass, Up From Slavery by Booker T. Washington, Incidents in the Life of A Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs, And Arn't I A Woman by Sojourner Truth, The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou, The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Malcolm X and Alex Haley, Roots: The Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley, Letter From Birmingham Jail, I Have a Dream, and Other Writings by Martin Luther King Jr., On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madame C.J. Walker by A'leila Bundles, Hidden Figures: The Untold Story of The Black Women Who Helped Win the Space Race by Margot Lee Shetterley, Through My Eyes by Ruby Bridges, We Were 8 Years in Poweer by Na-Hishi Coates, Dreams of My Father and The Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
Plays: Fences and The Piano Lesson by August Wilson, for colored girls who considered suicide when the rainbow is enuf by Notzake Shange, Twilight: Los Angeles 1992 by Anna Deavere Smith, The Colored Museum by George C. Wolfe
Poems and Short Story Authors: Phyllis Wheatley, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucille Clifton, Maya Angelou, bell hooks, Rita Dove, Dudley Randall, Elizabeth Alexander, June Jordan, Quincy Troupe, Amiri Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Audre Lorde
Saturday, February 10, 2018
Classics Corner: Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte: Romance Classic About the Dangers of Unbridled Passion, Between Unlikable Characters.
Classics Corner : Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte: Romance About The Dangers of Unbridled Passion, Between Unlikable Characters
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers:There are many who find Wuthering Heights, the standard for classic romance, and Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, the ultimate literary couple: brooding, troubled, passionate but always romantic. I am sure there are many who darn it all, believe they should somehow have been happy ever after. Unfortunately, I am not one of those Readers.
I have such a complicated relationship with the Emily Bronte novel. I like the idea of it, the passion between two outsiders, and I love the Brontes as authors and individuals. They were creative and imaginative women, who because of a fairly isolated childhood, they and their brother created and wrote fantasy worlds and stories. Then as the women matured, Emily, Anne, and Charlotte co-authored a book of poems and wrote three individual novels that they published as a unit: Emily's Wuthering Heights, Anne's Agnes Grey, and Charlotte's Jane Eyre. I admire their creativity, tenacity, and Jane Eyre is one of my favorite novels. Period.
So what I'm saying is that I wish I liked Wuthering Heights better, but every time I read it, I find it uncomfortable and not romantic with characters who are passionate but abusive and possessive in their passion. I find it more about the idea of love than love itself like two teenagers who keep insisting that they are in love, will run off get married and stay happy (ignoring the unfinished education, children born before the parents are ready, and the inevitable divorce that results) and what do Mom and Dad have to say about that. It's about two thoroughly unlikable characters that insist that the only people who matter are themselves and spend most of the novel making the other characters, each other, and themselves suffer.
Catherine and Heathcliff's relationship begins when they are children and Heathcliff is adopted by Catherine's father as a playmate for her in replace of the whip that she asked for. (Though in their insightful analysis The Madwoman in the Attic, Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gruber suggest that Heathcliff acts as "whip" exhibiting physical violence such as destroying her older brother Hindley's violin, on Catherine's subconscious behalf.)
Though he is welcomed as a best friend by Catherine, he is disliked by Hindley and after his and Catherine's father's death, Heathcliff gets treated as a servant.
As Catherine grows older, she is befriended by the Lintons, a more socially acceptable pair of friends. Even though Catherine and Heathcliff begin a passionate affair, Hindley separates them by arranging Catherine's marriage to Edgar Linton. A jealous Heathcliff is sent away and then returns mysteriously wealthy and ready to seek vengeance on the Earnshaw and Linton families for keeping him apart from Catherine.
Heathcliff is a character for which the so-called "Abuse Excuse" was invented.
"I was miserable as a child so I will be miserable as an adult and make everyone else miserable as well," is their credo. He takes over the Earnshaw estate Wuthering Heights and dominates Hindley's son, Hareton so he treats him as a servant in the same manner that Hareton's father treated him.
Heathcliff also receives the attention of Isabella Linton, Edgar's younger sister and then he pushes Isabella to run away with him where he instantly tires of her, systematically abuses her and destroys her self-worth because her family hurt him. His and Isabella's unhappy marriage ends in a separation in which Isabella gives birth to a sickly son, Linton, who is also used in Heathcliff's revenge campaign.
Every time that he hurts someone, particularly Isabella who is more or less an innocent bystander in Heathcliff's passion, this Reader keeps wanting to say "This is the guy who enchanted millions of readers? Is there another Heathcliff that I don't know about?"
Now I admit, I have a fondness for anti-heroes and I don't mind characters with troubled backgrounds. There are some like Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man or Gustave Flaubert's Emma Bovary
(or most recently read Amethyst's Victoria and Tancredi Raven)
who are certainly victimized by their social status, race, gender, or unfortunate circumstances,
to the point where the reader knows that things won't end well. They still come across as fascinating even when they are trapped by their circumstances because they at least try to challenge them despite not because of them. They seem to say, "This stuff is happening to me so I will do this anyway. I may go down but at least I'll be myself while I'm doing so." Not "I am doing this BECAUSE of my background and no other reason." Heathcliff never seems to get beyond the troubled childhood past in a way that makes this Reader root for him.
There are other anti-heroic characters that are fascinating because they are so charming, troubled childhood or not like Vanity Fair's Becky Sharp and What Makes Sammy Run's Sammy Glick (who as many will recall was one of my favorite read books from 2017). They may draw characters
into their confidence, but only the most foolish of characters would leave before checking
their pockets, purses, and probably their drinks and backs afterward. Even when the anti-heroes are more brooding and serious, they show a dry sense of humor and snarkiness that can be amusing at times.
However what sets these characters apart from Heathcliff is besides their superficial charm, they also show modicums of humanity and vulnerability to show that they are more than someone who lives a life of gray morality. These characters show loss and some slight emotions for others, that border on human concern, making them more understandable though not always likable.
Heathcliff never goes beyond that brooding persona, constantly railing, abusive and angry.
Even his affection for Catherine borders more on narcissism than any real concern for her. It seems more like adolescent infatuation that never matured and is instead destructive.
Not that Catherine comes across any better. While Heathcliff manipulates those around him physically and uses his new-found money, Catherine often resorts to verbal abuse constantly yelling and arguing with those around her. She taunts Edgar with her affection for Heathcliff saying that Heathcliff is manlier than he will ever be and derides Isabella seeing her as a rival for Heathcliff's affections. (Though since Isabella married Heathcliff, wouldn't that make Catherine the other woman?)
Even in her passages with Heathcliff, the two aren't particularly happy together. Instead their dialogue is constant accusations, backbiting, and arguing over who hurt who. They show very little real affection for each other beyond a constant desire to be together physically.
Catherine does gain some sympathy as she sinks further into a mental breakdown. Many readers who are mentally ill themselves may understand how one's emotions and psyche can overpower them so much that they find it impossible to function. But even that sympathy is at a minimum. Catherine seems more manipulative using her state as a means to attack those around her. She blames her emotions for Heathcliff and her marriage to Edgar putting her in this state. Like Heathcliff, Catherine's affection for him is adolescence becoming unstable to the point where she is unable to live with anyone even herself.
Even as Catherine dies and long afterwards, she and Heathcliff continue to alternate between longing for each other and saying that they were responsible for their decline. They are like that couple in a group of friends, who constantly get separated, insisting that they hate each other, attacking one another on social media, only to reunite again all affection, tenderness, and sex swearing all is forgiven. This couple often leaves their friends sighing in frustration, wondering "Why don't they just get divorced already?"
If they lived today, Catherine and Heathcliff would probably be diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder and Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Two people who believe that only their emotions matter, display immaturity with everyone else around them, and manipulate others to get what they want. Unfortunately, when they have what they want, i.e. each other, they still make each other miserable. Their relationship motto seems to be "If I can't have you no one else can, including ourselves."
There are many Readers who don't like the second half of the book in which the narrative is filled with characters who repeat names of earlier characters: Hareton Earnshaw (son of Hindley), Linton Heathcliff (son of Heathcliff and Isabella), and Cathy Linton (daughter of Catherine Earnshaw and Edgar Linton). Many see the next half as a " sanitized, more censored, and socially acceptable" version of the previous half. However, I actually find the younger generation better characters than the original.
While Linton Heathcliff is extremely sickly and whiny, he is more of a plot device, for Heathcliff to marry him off to the younger, Cathy. However, Cathy Linton and Hareton Earnshaw exhibit many of the negative traits of their forebears: Cathy is snobbish and emotional. (She often mocks Hareton's illiteracy while teaching him to read). Hareton is more cynical and hardened. (He often seeks Cathy purposely to argue with her). However, the two are able to mature and bring out deeper emotions such as love and friendship, rather than constant physical passion bordering on instability like their forebears.
Since this was Emily Bronte's only novel (she died in 1848), she never got the opportunity to develop her craft into another work like her sisters did. Perhaps one could see the second half of Wuthering Heights, less as a retelling of the first half than the work of a maturing writer who developed her characters beyond infatuation. The second half of Wuthering Heights, could be considered Emily Bronte's second novel, the work of an author who grew up and wanted her characters to do so as well even if she didn't live to see it.
This is not a beautiful romance, Wuthering Heights could be more seen as a cautionary tale of unbridled passions. When characters' emotions can't seem to get beyond adolescent infatuation and constant obsession, they end up destroying each other and themselves.
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers:There are many who find Wuthering Heights, the standard for classic romance, and Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, the ultimate literary couple: brooding, troubled, passionate but always romantic. I am sure there are many who darn it all, believe they should somehow have been happy ever after. Unfortunately, I am not one of those Readers.
I have such a complicated relationship with the Emily Bronte novel. I like the idea of it, the passion between two outsiders, and I love the Brontes as authors and individuals. They were creative and imaginative women, who because of a fairly isolated childhood, they and their brother created and wrote fantasy worlds and stories. Then as the women matured, Emily, Anne, and Charlotte co-authored a book of poems and wrote three individual novels that they published as a unit: Emily's Wuthering Heights, Anne's Agnes Grey, and Charlotte's Jane Eyre. I admire their creativity, tenacity, and Jane Eyre is one of my favorite novels. Period.
So what I'm saying is that I wish I liked Wuthering Heights better, but every time I read it, I find it uncomfortable and not romantic with characters who are passionate but abusive and possessive in their passion. I find it more about the idea of love than love itself like two teenagers who keep insisting that they are in love, will run off get married and stay happy (ignoring the unfinished education, children born before the parents are ready, and the inevitable divorce that results) and what do Mom and Dad have to say about that. It's about two thoroughly unlikable characters that insist that the only people who matter are themselves and spend most of the novel making the other characters, each other, and themselves suffer.
Catherine and Heathcliff's relationship begins when they are children and Heathcliff is adopted by Catherine's father as a playmate for her in replace of the whip that she asked for. (Though in their insightful analysis The Madwoman in the Attic, Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gruber suggest that Heathcliff acts as "whip" exhibiting physical violence such as destroying her older brother Hindley's violin, on Catherine's subconscious behalf.)
Though he is welcomed as a best friend by Catherine, he is disliked by Hindley and after his and Catherine's father's death, Heathcliff gets treated as a servant.
As Catherine grows older, she is befriended by the Lintons, a more socially acceptable pair of friends. Even though Catherine and Heathcliff begin a passionate affair, Hindley separates them by arranging Catherine's marriage to Edgar Linton. A jealous Heathcliff is sent away and then returns mysteriously wealthy and ready to seek vengeance on the Earnshaw and Linton families for keeping him apart from Catherine.
Heathcliff is a character for which the so-called "Abuse Excuse" was invented.
"I was miserable as a child so I will be miserable as an adult and make everyone else miserable as well," is their credo. He takes over the Earnshaw estate Wuthering Heights and dominates Hindley's son, Hareton so he treats him as a servant in the same manner that Hareton's father treated him.
Heathcliff also receives the attention of Isabella Linton, Edgar's younger sister and then he pushes Isabella to run away with him where he instantly tires of her, systematically abuses her and destroys her self-worth because her family hurt him. His and Isabella's unhappy marriage ends in a separation in which Isabella gives birth to a sickly son, Linton, who is also used in Heathcliff's revenge campaign.
Every time that he hurts someone, particularly Isabella who is more or less an innocent bystander in Heathcliff's passion, this Reader keeps wanting to say "This is the guy who enchanted millions of readers? Is there another Heathcliff that I don't know about?"
Now I admit, I have a fondness for anti-heroes and I don't mind characters with troubled backgrounds. There are some like Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man or Gustave Flaubert's Emma Bovary
(or most recently read Amethyst's Victoria and Tancredi Raven)
who are certainly victimized by their social status, race, gender, or unfortunate circumstances,
to the point where the reader knows that things won't end well. They still come across as fascinating even when they are trapped by their circumstances because they at least try to challenge them despite not because of them. They seem to say, "This stuff is happening to me so I will do this anyway. I may go down but at least I'll be myself while I'm doing so." Not "I am doing this BECAUSE of my background and no other reason." Heathcliff never seems to get beyond the troubled childhood past in a way that makes this Reader root for him.
There are other anti-heroic characters that are fascinating because they are so charming, troubled childhood or not like Vanity Fair's Becky Sharp and What Makes Sammy Run's Sammy Glick (who as many will recall was one of my favorite read books from 2017). They may draw characters
into their confidence, but only the most foolish of characters would leave before checking
their pockets, purses, and probably their drinks and backs afterward. Even when the anti-heroes are more brooding and serious, they show a dry sense of humor and snarkiness that can be amusing at times.
However what sets these characters apart from Heathcliff is besides their superficial charm, they also show modicums of humanity and vulnerability to show that they are more than someone who lives a life of gray morality. These characters show loss and some slight emotions for others, that border on human concern, making them more understandable though not always likable.
Heathcliff never goes beyond that brooding persona, constantly railing, abusive and angry.
Even his affection for Catherine borders more on narcissism than any real concern for her. It seems more like adolescent infatuation that never matured and is instead destructive.
Not that Catherine comes across any better. While Heathcliff manipulates those around him physically and uses his new-found money, Catherine often resorts to verbal abuse constantly yelling and arguing with those around her. She taunts Edgar with her affection for Heathcliff saying that Heathcliff is manlier than he will ever be and derides Isabella seeing her as a rival for Heathcliff's affections. (Though since Isabella married Heathcliff, wouldn't that make Catherine the other woman?)
Even in her passages with Heathcliff, the two aren't particularly happy together. Instead their dialogue is constant accusations, backbiting, and arguing over who hurt who. They show very little real affection for each other beyond a constant desire to be together physically.
Catherine does gain some sympathy as she sinks further into a mental breakdown. Many readers who are mentally ill themselves may understand how one's emotions and psyche can overpower them so much that they find it impossible to function. But even that sympathy is at a minimum. Catherine seems more manipulative using her state as a means to attack those around her. She blames her emotions for Heathcliff and her marriage to Edgar putting her in this state. Like Heathcliff, Catherine's affection for him is adolescence becoming unstable to the point where she is unable to live with anyone even herself.
Even as Catherine dies and long afterwards, she and Heathcliff continue to alternate between longing for each other and saying that they were responsible for their decline. They are like that couple in a group of friends, who constantly get separated, insisting that they hate each other, attacking one another on social media, only to reunite again all affection, tenderness, and sex swearing all is forgiven. This couple often leaves their friends sighing in frustration, wondering "Why don't they just get divorced already?"
If they lived today, Catherine and Heathcliff would probably be diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder and Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Two people who believe that only their emotions matter, display immaturity with everyone else around them, and manipulate others to get what they want. Unfortunately, when they have what they want, i.e. each other, they still make each other miserable. Their relationship motto seems to be "If I can't have you no one else can, including ourselves."
There are many Readers who don't like the second half of the book in which the narrative is filled with characters who repeat names of earlier characters: Hareton Earnshaw (son of Hindley), Linton Heathcliff (son of Heathcliff and Isabella), and Cathy Linton (daughter of Catherine Earnshaw and Edgar Linton). Many see the next half as a " sanitized, more censored, and socially acceptable" version of the previous half. However, I actually find the younger generation better characters than the original.
While Linton Heathcliff is extremely sickly and whiny, he is more of a plot device, for Heathcliff to marry him off to the younger, Cathy. However, Cathy Linton and Hareton Earnshaw exhibit many of the negative traits of their forebears: Cathy is snobbish and emotional. (She often mocks Hareton's illiteracy while teaching him to read). Hareton is more cynical and hardened. (He often seeks Cathy purposely to argue with her). However, the two are able to mature and bring out deeper emotions such as love and friendship, rather than constant physical passion bordering on instability like their forebears.
Since this was Emily Bronte's only novel (she died in 1848), she never got the opportunity to develop her craft into another work like her sisters did. Perhaps one could see the second half of Wuthering Heights, less as a retelling of the first half than the work of a maturing writer who developed her characters beyond infatuation. The second half of Wuthering Heights, could be considered Emily Bronte's second novel, the work of an author who grew up and wanted her characters to do so as well even if she didn't live to see it.
This is not a beautiful romance, Wuthering Heights could be more seen as a cautionary tale of unbridled passions. When characters' emotions can't seem to get beyond adolescent infatuation and constant obsession, they end up destroying each other and themselves.
Friday, February 9, 2018
Weekly Reader: The Sugar Queen By Sarah Addison Allen; A Sweet Magical Chick Lit/Romance That Goes Down Like Fine Candy
Weekly Reader : The Sugar Queen by Sarah Addison Allen: A Sweet Magical Chick Lit/Romance That Goes Down Like Fine Candy
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: The Sugar Queen is one of those books that's not for the cynical of heart. It's drenched in strange sweet little magical touches that bring a smile to the Reader's face: touches such as books that appear out of nowhere, favorite clothing that inspire romance, and advice from a very unusual woman that suggests one thing but lead to deeper resolutions. When all of this is done, the Reader is left with some sweet memories and a happy ending.
The very unusual woman with odd advice is Della Lee Baker, a tough talking waitress who arrives inside the closet of heiress, Josey Cirrini. Josey is naturally confused about why Della Lee is hiding inside her closet, reading Josey's carefully hidden romance paperback novels and indulging herself in Josey's hidden candies and chocolate snacks. After Della Lee explains she is on the run from her abusive boyfriend, she decides to make Josey into her personal project by giving her advice to make friends, have romance, an independent life, and to improve herself.
Josey is at first reluctant to follow Della Lee's advice and scoffs at her with some clever repartee ("I hear the closets at the Holiday Inn are fabulous. You should try them. "). But she also realizes that she could use some help.
At 27 years old, Josey feels metaphorically imprisoned by Margaret, a verbally abusive mother. Margaret wants to control every aspect of her life such as her clothing (Margaret insists that she should never wear red "because she looks horrible in it" even though it's Josey's favorite color), her weight and reading interests (Hence the hidden romance novels and snacks. Margaret thinks of her daughter as a fat daydreamer.), and her schedule. (She must always be on hand to chauffeur her mother around to her "emergency appointments" like trips to the manicurists, tea parties, weekly social events, etc.).
Josey also suffers from the reputation of her late father, Marco Cirrini, the man who built her hometown of Bald Slope, North Carolina and has an almost demi-god reputation of many who thought he could do no wrong (Though many women who had been at the opposite ends of his philandering would argue with that assessment.). When her father was alive, Josey was given to temper tantrums people still remember and call Josey to task on them even though they were over twenty years ago. This reputation causes Josey to retreat further into herself so any assertiveness could never be mistaken as a spoiled childish tantrum.
Because of her reputation as a once spoiled brat of a charming philandering father and an emotionally abusive Southern Belle mother, it is no wonder Josey needs all the help she can get. Thanks to Della Lee's influence, Josey begins to wear her favorite red sweater which draws Adam, the handsome mail carrier whom she long admired from afar. The two start to talk, resulting in a date.
Many Readers with parental problems and extremely introverted but longing personalities can understand Josey's growing frustration with her family, subtle acts of rebellion, and desire to escape. Maybe some Readers long for someone to come along and help shake them out of their dull complacent lives as Della Lee does for Josey. The two make for a wonderful team as Josey provides shelter from Della Lee's problems and Della Lee gives Josey a way out of hers.
Another chatacter who glows because of the friendship between Della Lee and Josey, is Chloe Finley, a diner waitress. Chloe has problems of her own, some typical one not so typical. Her typical problems consist of a long -time boyfriend who confessed to an affair and now wants to get back together, an attraction to a handsome but dangerous man whom Della Lee knows personally, and her desire to buy a specific dream house but little money to purchase it.
Chloe's not so typical problem would no doubt make her the envy of her Readers. Books follow her everywhere she goes. They appear out of thin air, newly made, usually when Chloe is at an emotional crossroads. The books pertain to whatever predicament that Chloe is in. After a fight with Chloe's boyfriend, Jake, a book appears titled Finding Forgiveness. After consulting with the home owners of her dream house, another book arrives: The Complete Home Owner's Guide.
Books appear as a conscience to Chloe giving advice to her, as Della Lee does for Josey. Sometimes Chloe is annoyed by their presence ("I said go away, " Chloe yells at one of her books in Josey's presence.) But Chloe's relationship with her books, as well as her new friendship with Josey, points to potential solutions to her predicaments.
Josey, Della Lee, and Chloe are a terrific trio of protagonists that become closer because of some interesting revelations that seem to come out of nowhere, but make sense the more the book continues as the Reader learns about the characters and their relationships.
The Sugar Queen is sweet, sugary, and filled with magic found in every day life, magic of reading, color, romance, and friendship. This is the type of book that goes down like fine candy, good to the last bite.
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: The Sugar Queen is one of those books that's not for the cynical of heart. It's drenched in strange sweet little magical touches that bring a smile to the Reader's face: touches such as books that appear out of nowhere, favorite clothing that inspire romance, and advice from a very unusual woman that suggests one thing but lead to deeper resolutions. When all of this is done, the Reader is left with some sweet memories and a happy ending.
The very unusual woman with odd advice is Della Lee Baker, a tough talking waitress who arrives inside the closet of heiress, Josey Cirrini. Josey is naturally confused about why Della Lee is hiding inside her closet, reading Josey's carefully hidden romance paperback novels and indulging herself in Josey's hidden candies and chocolate snacks. After Della Lee explains she is on the run from her abusive boyfriend, she decides to make Josey into her personal project by giving her advice to make friends, have romance, an independent life, and to improve herself.
Josey is at first reluctant to follow Della Lee's advice and scoffs at her with some clever repartee ("I hear the closets at the Holiday Inn are fabulous. You should try them. "). But she also realizes that she could use some help.
At 27 years old, Josey feels metaphorically imprisoned by Margaret, a verbally abusive mother. Margaret wants to control every aspect of her life such as her clothing (Margaret insists that she should never wear red "because she looks horrible in it" even though it's Josey's favorite color), her weight and reading interests (Hence the hidden romance novels and snacks. Margaret thinks of her daughter as a fat daydreamer.), and her schedule. (She must always be on hand to chauffeur her mother around to her "emergency appointments" like trips to the manicurists, tea parties, weekly social events, etc.).
Josey also suffers from the reputation of her late father, Marco Cirrini, the man who built her hometown of Bald Slope, North Carolina and has an almost demi-god reputation of many who thought he could do no wrong (Though many women who had been at the opposite ends of his philandering would argue with that assessment.). When her father was alive, Josey was given to temper tantrums people still remember and call Josey to task on them even though they were over twenty years ago. This reputation causes Josey to retreat further into herself so any assertiveness could never be mistaken as a spoiled childish tantrum.
Because of her reputation as a once spoiled brat of a charming philandering father and an emotionally abusive Southern Belle mother, it is no wonder Josey needs all the help she can get. Thanks to Della Lee's influence, Josey begins to wear her favorite red sweater which draws Adam, the handsome mail carrier whom she long admired from afar. The two start to talk, resulting in a date.
Many Readers with parental problems and extremely introverted but longing personalities can understand Josey's growing frustration with her family, subtle acts of rebellion, and desire to escape. Maybe some Readers long for someone to come along and help shake them out of their dull complacent lives as Della Lee does for Josey. The two make for a wonderful team as Josey provides shelter from Della Lee's problems and Della Lee gives Josey a way out of hers.
Another chatacter who glows because of the friendship between Della Lee and Josey, is Chloe Finley, a diner waitress. Chloe has problems of her own, some typical one not so typical. Her typical problems consist of a long -time boyfriend who confessed to an affair and now wants to get back together, an attraction to a handsome but dangerous man whom Della Lee knows personally, and her desire to buy a specific dream house but little money to purchase it.
Chloe's not so typical problem would no doubt make her the envy of her Readers. Books follow her everywhere she goes. They appear out of thin air, newly made, usually when Chloe is at an emotional crossroads. The books pertain to whatever predicament that Chloe is in. After a fight with Chloe's boyfriend, Jake, a book appears titled Finding Forgiveness. After consulting with the home owners of her dream house, another book arrives: The Complete Home Owner's Guide.
Books appear as a conscience to Chloe giving advice to her, as Della Lee does for Josey. Sometimes Chloe is annoyed by their presence ("I said go away, " Chloe yells at one of her books in Josey's presence.) But Chloe's relationship with her books, as well as her new friendship with Josey, points to potential solutions to her predicaments.
Josey, Della Lee, and Chloe are a terrific trio of protagonists that become closer because of some interesting revelations that seem to come out of nowhere, but make sense the more the book continues as the Reader learns about the characters and their relationships.
The Sugar Queen is sweet, sugary, and filled with magic found in every day life, magic of reading, color, romance, and friendship. This is the type of book that goes down like fine candy, good to the last bite.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Forgotten Favorites: Amethyst by Mary-Rose Hayes: A Strange Unforgettable Novel About Prophecy and Fulfillment
Forgotten Favorites: Amethyst by Mary -Rose Hayes: A Strange But Unforgettable Novel About Prophecy and Fulfillment
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: February's birth stone is the Amethyst and it's birth sign is Aquarius until the 19th when the zodiac sign changes over to Pisces. People who are born under these signs are supposed to be intelligent, eccentric, and have a fascination with and involvement in the psychic world.
Victoria Raven, one of the four protagonists of Mary-Rose Hayes' novel, Amethyst seems to possess all of these attributes and more as she enters the lives of her classmates Jessica Hunter, Catriona Scoresby, and Gwyneth Jones and ends up changing their lives far greater than they ever would have imagined in this very odd but very unforgettable story.
The story of the four women begins at the end where the Reader learns that all four live successful lives-Jessica as a painter, Catriona as a hotel magnate, Gwyneth as a supermodel, and Victoria as a foreign correspondent/journalist.
Jessica, Gwyneth, and Catriona are contemplating their next steps in their careers and with the men in their lives when they receive a call from Victoria's brother, Tancredi telling them to come to the Ravens' estate home in Scotland because Victoria "needs them." This urgent request sends the trio sprinting from their homes in Mexico, New York City and rural Southern England where they recall their strange friendship.
The three girls meet Victoria Raven in 1968 at Twyneham, a girl's boarding school that seems to specialize in training rich young girls to become the wives of wealthy men. At least that's the plan for the wealthy Catriona Scoresby who dreams of being the wife of upperclass, Jonathan Wyndham. Jessica Hunter, a daughter of nobility, also plans for an arranged marriage and to occasionally dabble in painting. Gwyneth Jones, a scholarship student, plans to coast by as a kindergarten teacher with an amiable friendly personality but little prospects.
When Victoria arrives, she impresses the girls with her backstory of being one of two illegitimate children of a Scottish earl, her platinum hair and witchy appearance, her strange words which are meant to confuse and provoke them (such as when Victoria tells Gwyneth that as a kindergarten teacher she could also "study and design children's clothes"), and her strange amethyst ring which she claims predicts the future.
During a seance with Victoria's depraved and deceased father and using her ring as a planchette, the girls discover different paths than what their families and social backgrounds have dictated. Jessica "will travel to another country to see more clearly. " Catriona will marry Jonathan "but at great cost and must trust (her) resources to find happiness." Gwyneth will "become a millionaire before she's 30 because of impeccable bones. " The most chilling prediction that is made is that the quartet will be reunited on that date (June 30) tweny years later but will be one less person.
To tell of the four's successful independent lives in the first chapter then featuring their less assured school days in the second leaves little room for suspense or surprise revelations. ( Except that "one less" prediction rings over like a death knell in all of their lives and explains why Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth are so anxious about Victoria's condition after Tancredi's call. )
However, the narrative style prepares the Reader to understand the journey that transforms the protagonists from complacent class-conscious schoolgirls to independent confident women. The book also gives us four brilliantly written characters to experience this narrative. Instead of the plot traveling in a straight line, it travels in a circle, like Victoria's amethyst ring, where the beginning and end are known but not the middle, not the "how it happened."
The journies that the women make to reach fulfillment through their friendship and individualities are wonderful reads.
Jessica and Gwyneth's chatacters evolve as they move to California and find their purposes.
Jessica becomes a sexually active pot-smoking hippie who begins to take her art seriously. Gwyneth goes from working as an au pair for distant cousins, to a secretary for an advertising agency, to a model advertising hair care products.
The two women find complications in their love lives as their careers begin to soar. While painting landscapes that hang "in banks, hotel foyers, and in offices," Jessica leaves behind one unhappy love affair in London and considers marrying a wealthy mentally disabled man whom she does not love because she is sorry for him and is befriended by his eccentric parents.
Gwyneth becomes recognized as "the Tawny Tress girl" and a cover model, but she is abused by a controlling maniuplative photographer-boyfriend who pushes her into anorexia nervosa until her agent is forced to give her an intervention.
Far from the free-spirited America experienced by Jessica and Gwyneth, Catriona's retreat into uppercrust English society is no less complicated. While she marries Jonathan, she doesn't find the happy ever after she imagined. Instead she finds a snobbish and highly critical mother-in-law, constant requests to her self-made millionaire father to rebuild and refurnish her in-law's family home, and Jonathan, whom she discovers is having an affair...with a man and not just any man, but Victoria's brother, Tancredi. (with whom Gwyneth also falls in love after a one-night stand.)
Catriona at first is the weakest character of the quartet as she responds to her unhappy marriage by crying, denial, and trying fruitlessly to win her husband's affections including giving birth to two children. It is only after she is threatened by bankruptcy and death does she come into her own and opens her parent's estate and her in-laws' manor as luxury hotels.
Victoria's journey is the most mysterious as Gwyneth, Jessica, and Catriona occasionally reunite with her to touch base and answer their own questions about Victoria's precognitive abilities. When they don't reunite with her and Victoria gives spot-on advice based on their current dilemmas, she is often reporting from dangerous spots-Vietnam during the War, Central America during government conflicts, or the Middle East during terrorist activities and hanging with sinister characters like Carlos Ruiz, who might be a terrorist or might be Victoria's bodyguard and lover.
Victoria's ability to enter dangerous spots and come out of them relatively unscathed makes the three others question her further. Is she psychic and able to use supernatural means to see into the future? Is she a master manipulator programming people to subconsciously follow her orders? Is she simply a good reporter with a natural nose for news? Is she a terrorist who is more involved in world events than just reporting on them? While the narrative has Victoria admit one possibility, the final pages offer more alternatives that leave Jessica, Catriona, Gwyneth, and the Reader with more questions and theories and continue to make Victoria more fascinating.
Books that feature female leads that enphasize romance, female friendship and empowerment, often feature weak male characters. (Perhaps in retaliation for many of the older novels that feature intriguing well developed male characters and superficial female love interests.) Hayes thankfully did not do this and all three of Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth's final male love interests are just as fascinating as their ladies.
There's Dr. Rafael Herrerra, a Mexican surgeon who shows Jessica "the real Mexico" of beautiful beaches but also poor families and bandits and also shows Jessica his "art" of surgery after Jessica shows him hers of painting. Alfred Smith, a Cockney artist captures Gwyneth's heart when he not only demonstrates a strong artistic talent but a rakish second career as a fence, receiver a stolen goods. While Catriona's affair with British agent, Shea McCormick begins rather abruptly, he develops as a srong protector and devoted lover to Catriona to the point that he is concerned about her safety because of her friendship with Victoria. Rafael, Alfred, and Shea demonstrate when the women find themselves and their independence, then the right people will come along and accept them for themselves.
The strongest male character is Tancredi Raven, Victoria's brother. Like his younger sister, he is also fascinating. He weaves in and out of the novel as a professional gambler and card counter and breaker of hearts such as Gwyneth's and Jonathan's. He is seen as someone who callously seduces and abandons lovers, sometimes taking delight in his cruelty.
However, Tancredi shows some honesty and vulnerability in the strangest of places such as when he calls Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth because he is aware how valuable these women are to his sister.
The Raven Siblings are the catalysts for change in the other characters. In school, Victoria pushes Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth to pursue their own interests and gain their independence. As adults, Tancredi brings them together to confront and let go of their past and create better futures.
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: February's birth stone is the Amethyst and it's birth sign is Aquarius until the 19th when the zodiac sign changes over to Pisces. People who are born under these signs are supposed to be intelligent, eccentric, and have a fascination with and involvement in the psychic world.
Victoria Raven, one of the four protagonists of Mary-Rose Hayes' novel, Amethyst seems to possess all of these attributes and more as she enters the lives of her classmates Jessica Hunter, Catriona Scoresby, and Gwyneth Jones and ends up changing their lives far greater than they ever would have imagined in this very odd but very unforgettable story.
The story of the four women begins at the end where the Reader learns that all four live successful lives-Jessica as a painter, Catriona as a hotel magnate, Gwyneth as a supermodel, and Victoria as a foreign correspondent/journalist.
Jessica, Gwyneth, and Catriona are contemplating their next steps in their careers and with the men in their lives when they receive a call from Victoria's brother, Tancredi telling them to come to the Ravens' estate home in Scotland because Victoria "needs them." This urgent request sends the trio sprinting from their homes in Mexico, New York City and rural Southern England where they recall their strange friendship.
The three girls meet Victoria Raven in 1968 at Twyneham, a girl's boarding school that seems to specialize in training rich young girls to become the wives of wealthy men. At least that's the plan for the wealthy Catriona Scoresby who dreams of being the wife of upperclass, Jonathan Wyndham. Jessica Hunter, a daughter of nobility, also plans for an arranged marriage and to occasionally dabble in painting. Gwyneth Jones, a scholarship student, plans to coast by as a kindergarten teacher with an amiable friendly personality but little prospects.
When Victoria arrives, she impresses the girls with her backstory of being one of two illegitimate children of a Scottish earl, her platinum hair and witchy appearance, her strange words which are meant to confuse and provoke them (such as when Victoria tells Gwyneth that as a kindergarten teacher she could also "study and design children's clothes"), and her strange amethyst ring which she claims predicts the future.
During a seance with Victoria's depraved and deceased father and using her ring as a planchette, the girls discover different paths than what their families and social backgrounds have dictated. Jessica "will travel to another country to see more clearly. " Catriona will marry Jonathan "but at great cost and must trust (her) resources to find happiness." Gwyneth will "become a millionaire before she's 30 because of impeccable bones. " The most chilling prediction that is made is that the quartet will be reunited on that date (June 30) tweny years later but will be one less person.
To tell of the four's successful independent lives in the first chapter then featuring their less assured school days in the second leaves little room for suspense or surprise revelations. ( Except that "one less" prediction rings over like a death knell in all of their lives and explains why Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth are so anxious about Victoria's condition after Tancredi's call. )
However, the narrative style prepares the Reader to understand the journey that transforms the protagonists from complacent class-conscious schoolgirls to independent confident women. The book also gives us four brilliantly written characters to experience this narrative. Instead of the plot traveling in a straight line, it travels in a circle, like Victoria's amethyst ring, where the beginning and end are known but not the middle, not the "how it happened."
The journies that the women make to reach fulfillment through their friendship and individualities are wonderful reads.
Jessica and Gwyneth's chatacters evolve as they move to California and find their purposes.
Jessica becomes a sexually active pot-smoking hippie who begins to take her art seriously. Gwyneth goes from working as an au pair for distant cousins, to a secretary for an advertising agency, to a model advertising hair care products.
The two women find complications in their love lives as their careers begin to soar. While painting landscapes that hang "in banks, hotel foyers, and in offices," Jessica leaves behind one unhappy love affair in London and considers marrying a wealthy mentally disabled man whom she does not love because she is sorry for him and is befriended by his eccentric parents.
Gwyneth becomes recognized as "the Tawny Tress girl" and a cover model, but she is abused by a controlling maniuplative photographer-boyfriend who pushes her into anorexia nervosa until her agent is forced to give her an intervention.
Far from the free-spirited America experienced by Jessica and Gwyneth, Catriona's retreat into uppercrust English society is no less complicated. While she marries Jonathan, she doesn't find the happy ever after she imagined. Instead she finds a snobbish and highly critical mother-in-law, constant requests to her self-made millionaire father to rebuild and refurnish her in-law's family home, and Jonathan, whom she discovers is having an affair...with a man and not just any man, but Victoria's brother, Tancredi. (with whom Gwyneth also falls in love after a one-night stand.)
Catriona at first is the weakest character of the quartet as she responds to her unhappy marriage by crying, denial, and trying fruitlessly to win her husband's affections including giving birth to two children. It is only after she is threatened by bankruptcy and death does she come into her own and opens her parent's estate and her in-laws' manor as luxury hotels.
Victoria's journey is the most mysterious as Gwyneth, Jessica, and Catriona occasionally reunite with her to touch base and answer their own questions about Victoria's precognitive abilities. When they don't reunite with her and Victoria gives spot-on advice based on their current dilemmas, she is often reporting from dangerous spots-Vietnam during the War, Central America during government conflicts, or the Middle East during terrorist activities and hanging with sinister characters like Carlos Ruiz, who might be a terrorist or might be Victoria's bodyguard and lover.
Victoria's ability to enter dangerous spots and come out of them relatively unscathed makes the three others question her further. Is she psychic and able to use supernatural means to see into the future? Is she a master manipulator programming people to subconsciously follow her orders? Is she simply a good reporter with a natural nose for news? Is she a terrorist who is more involved in world events than just reporting on them? While the narrative has Victoria admit one possibility, the final pages offer more alternatives that leave Jessica, Catriona, Gwyneth, and the Reader with more questions and theories and continue to make Victoria more fascinating.
Books that feature female leads that enphasize romance, female friendship and empowerment, often feature weak male characters. (Perhaps in retaliation for many of the older novels that feature intriguing well developed male characters and superficial female love interests.) Hayes thankfully did not do this and all three of Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth's final male love interests are just as fascinating as their ladies.
There's Dr. Rafael Herrerra, a Mexican surgeon who shows Jessica "the real Mexico" of beautiful beaches but also poor families and bandits and also shows Jessica his "art" of surgery after Jessica shows him hers of painting. Alfred Smith, a Cockney artist captures Gwyneth's heart when he not only demonstrates a strong artistic talent but a rakish second career as a fence, receiver a stolen goods. While Catriona's affair with British agent, Shea McCormick begins rather abruptly, he develops as a srong protector and devoted lover to Catriona to the point that he is concerned about her safety because of her friendship with Victoria. Rafael, Alfred, and Shea demonstrate when the women find themselves and their independence, then the right people will come along and accept them for themselves.
The strongest male character is Tancredi Raven, Victoria's brother. Like his younger sister, he is also fascinating. He weaves in and out of the novel as a professional gambler and card counter and breaker of hearts such as Gwyneth's and Jonathan's. He is seen as someone who callously seduces and abandons lovers, sometimes taking delight in his cruelty.
However, Tancredi shows some honesty and vulnerability in the strangest of places such as when he calls Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth because he is aware how valuable these women are to his sister.
The Raven Siblings are the catalysts for change in the other characters. In school, Victoria pushes Jessica, Catriona, and Gwyneth to pursue their own interests and gain their independence. As adults, Tancredi brings them together to confront and let go of their past and create better futures.
Thursday, February 1, 2018
February's Schedule
Last month was great for the Bookworm Reviews! I read and reviewed quite a lot, got a lot of interest and response. Some very interesting discussions came from the books. Thank you all for being a part of this blog.
For February, I am working on two themes. Remember this is tentative only.
The first half of the month will focus on Romances and Chick Lit for Valentine's Day. They will include two modern magical realism novels about love-lorn women seeking unusual help for their romantic needs, one forgotten novel about passion, predictions, a modern Regency era love story and empowerment between four English women, and two Romantic classics from the Queens of the Genre.
The next half of the month focuses on Black History Month. It will include two recent best-sellers: one Alternate Universe where Slavery never ended and the other about two families during the Great Recession, two Autobiographies about women during slavery and the Civil Rights Movement, and a list of the top 10 novels for to honor Black History Month.
So enjoy and if you have any ideas for future reads let me know, here or on Facebook. As always, Happy Reading.
February 7- Forgotten Favorites: Amethyst by Mary-Rose Hayes
February 7- Weekly Reader: The Sugar Queen by Sarah Addison Allen
February 7- Classics Corner-Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
February 14- Weekly Reader: An Elegant Facade by Kristi Ann Hunter
February 14- Classics Corner: Emma by Jane Austen
February 20-Bonus Weekly Reader : A Night in With Audrey Hepburn by Lucy Holiday
February 21- Weekly Reader: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
February 21-Classics Corner: I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
February 26-Weekly Reader: Behold the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue
February 26-Classics Corner: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs
February 28-Lit List: Top Ten Novels To Honor Black History Month
For February, I am working on two themes. Remember this is tentative only.
The first half of the month will focus on Romances and Chick Lit for Valentine's Day. They will include two modern magical realism novels about love-lorn women seeking unusual help for their romantic needs, one forgotten novel about passion, predictions, a modern Regency era love story and empowerment between four English women, and two Romantic classics from the Queens of the Genre.
The next half of the month focuses on Black History Month. It will include two recent best-sellers: one Alternate Universe where Slavery never ended and the other about two families during the Great Recession, two Autobiographies about women during slavery and the Civil Rights Movement, and a list of the top 10 novels for to honor Black History Month.
So enjoy and if you have any ideas for future reads let me know, here or on Facebook. As always, Happy Reading.
February 7- Forgotten Favorites: Amethyst by Mary-Rose Hayes
February 7- Weekly Reader: The Sugar Queen by Sarah Addison Allen
February 7- Classics Corner-Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
February 14- Weekly Reader: An Elegant Facade by Kristi Ann Hunter
February 14- Classics Corner: Emma by Jane Austen
February 20-Bonus Weekly Reader : A Night in With Audrey Hepburn by Lucy Holiday
February 21- Weekly Reader: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
February 21-Classics Corner: I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
February 26-Weekly Reader: Behold the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue
February 26-Classics Corner: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs
February 28-Lit List: Top Ten Novels To Honor Black History Month