On February 27th when the RILL book club met for the first time this year, I borrowed an idea from Flannery O’Connor. This unique Southern writer said when it came to fiction, she could only be a “literary midwife” and declare whether a story was dead or alive. I did admit to the ten members there, that Flannery’s statement, logically speaking, was an either/or fallacy. But I used it anyway and asked for a one-word answer. “Did you find Huckleberry Finn, dead or alive?” Ten of us (I voted too) said, “Alive.” One said dead! Next I asked about James. This 2024 novel is in hardcover at $28.00 and currently a big best seller. Still and all, only four members said, “alive,” while seven of us saying “dead,” though not without caveats.
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I will say that using Flannery’s quip of being a “literary midwife” provoked good discussion, often passionate and forceful about James, along with some wonderful humor. One member, born in Louisiana, spoke with zeal about Everett’s novel and called herself, “an activist in my mother’s womb.” She added at the end of two and a half hours, that our session had been welcome; that we hadn’t been Southern ladies at a tea party. I also appreciated the response from one member who said “six-feet under” for James. Except for Everett’s Jim/James, in contrast to Twain’s depiction of the slave Jim, she asked if we didn’t already know what Everett portrayed. Her comment caught my attention because in my notes for the meeting, I had made a check list for James. Is the reader provided a lynching? A rape? A beating? Fear and Trembling? A Nate Turner murder?
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Yes, all and more. While reading James, I kept thinking of the graphic and unforgettable series Roots, televised five decades ago in the 1970s.
There is much to say, so next week I will return to James with more thoughts about Percival Everett’s novel and Mark Twain’s Huck.