Showing posts with label rural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rural. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Something Wicked This Way Comes

In the 1970s backwater of Coden, Alabama, a teenage orphan called Annie mysteriously arrives and quickly drives a wedge in an apparently perfect family.  Full of creepy supernatural elements and family secrets reminiscent of The Turn of the Screw and The Amityville Horror, The Darkling by R. B. Chesterton (aka Carolyn Haines) is a quick and easy read, which is sometimes exactly what you want on a sunny, beautiful afternoon.  HM

Monday, October 1, 2012

Read a Banned Book!

In 1937, writer and ethnographer Zora Neale Hurston published her greatest work to little fanfare -- Their Eyes Were Watching God was largely ignored, and was even viewed as tawdry.  Decades later, scholars and readers rediscovered her classic and fell under the spell of its heroine, Janie Crawford, a strong-willed African-American woman who narrates the passionate and tragic events of her life in 1930s Florida.  It is now regarded as one of the most important works in 20th century African American literature.

Their Eyes Were Watching God is just one of many books that the American Library Association has recorded as being banned or challenged by various groups -- check out our Banned Books display in the Adult Department.  HM

Thursday, July 21, 2011

heroine's journey

Joseph Campbell, noted writer on mythology,talked about how in many cultures, a theme of the hero's journey is evident. We see this in everything from The Odyssey to Star Wars. In the two following books, the young women that are the central characters are experiencing the hero's journey,the quest for identity. Bonnie Jo Campbell wrote Once Upon A River, which takes place on a river in Michigan. She is a self-sufficient young woman who can handle a rifle or skin game but is still a child when it comes to making choices. The violent death of her father cuts her off from her extended family and she undertakes a journey to find her absent mother. The journey,as all hero's quests,is a journey of self discovery.

In Winter's Bone, young Ree Dolley is on a journey to save the family home,after her father puts it up for bail and disappears. Ree's mother is mentally ill and she must find her father to keep the family farm for her younger brother and sister. This novel takes an unflinching look at a rural Ozark community that has been devastated by methamphetamine use. With the "law" no help and people refusing to talk Ree has to bravely forge ahead,and what she finds at the end is explosive. Both of these books feature wonderful writing and admirable lead characters. ML