Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Sweat by Zora Neale Hurston

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on February 28, 2011
Posted in Short Story Read in 2011  | 4 Comments

Zora Neale Hurston has been an author that I have wanted to read for the longest time but just never got around to, until now.

About Zora Neale Hurston:
Zora Neale Hurston was an American folklorist and author. In 1925, shortly before entering Barnard College, Hurston became one of the leaders of the literary renaissance happening in Harlem, producing the short-lived literary magazine Fire!! along with Langston Hughes and Wallace Thurman. This literary movement became the center of the Harlem Renaissance. 

Hurston applied her Barnard ethnographic training to document African American folklore in her critically acclaimed book Mules and Men along with fiction Their Eyes Were Watching God and dance, assembling a folk-based performance group that recreated her Southern tableau, with one performance on Broadway.
Hurston was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to travel to Haiti and conduct research on conjure in 1937. Her work was significant because she was able to break into the secret societies and expose their use of drugs to create the Vodun trance, also a subject of study for fellow dancer/anthropologist Katherine Dunham who was then at the University of Chicago. 

In 1954 Hurston was unable to sell her fiction but was assigned by the Pittsburgh Courier to cover the small-town murder trial of Ruby McCollum, the prosperous black wife of the local lottery racketeer, who had killed a racist white doctor. 


Hurston also contributed to Woman in the Suwanee County Jail, a book by journalist and civil rights advocate William Bradford Huie
. (Courtesy of GoodReads.)

Your can see from her fascinating bio, why I would want to read her works.  Sweat did not disappoint.

Delia Jones did laundry for the white folks who lived across town.  Every Saturday she hitched up her horse and wagon to deliver freshly washed laundry and picked up a new batch to be washed.  On Sunday, after church, she would get a head start with the weeks worth of work by sorting and soaking the whites.  She did the laundry because her deadbeat husband, Sykes spent all of the money he earned on himself and other women.  He didn’t give her any toward household expenses.

Delia very proud of the fact that she was able to buy the house they lived in but Sykes did not make life easy.  He hated the fact that she worked for white folks and some time undermined her work.

  “He stepped roughly upon the whitest pile of things, kicking them helter-skelter as he crossed the room. His wife gave a little scream of dismay, and quickly gathered them together again.”

One day Delia came home from delivering laundry, looking forward to some quiet time.  Sikes was standing near the door with a box and told her to look inside.  It contained a rattle snake and she screamed.  Sykes insisted on keeping the reptile just to freak her out.  One night..

“She lay awake, gazing upon the debris that cluttered their matrimonial trail. Not an image left standing along the way. Anything like flowers had long ago been drowned in the salty stream that had been pressed from her heart”

Things escalated from there and you can guess that the snake was not only highly symbolic in the story but pivitol as well. This story about domestic abuse and survival really packs a punch.  The writing was strong and poetic, although it took me a bit to of effort to read the dialogue.  For example,

“Dat niggah wouldn’t fetch nothin’ heah tuh save his rotten neck, but he kin run thew whut Ah brings quick enough. Now he done toted off nigh on tuh haff uh box uh matches. He done had dat ‘oman heah in mah house, too.”
Hurston paved the way for other strong female and African American authors.  She didn’t hide behind social issues but brought them to the forefront.  I look forward to reading more by Zora Neale Hurston.  You can read Sweat, here along with another story and some really interesting commentary.
This also concludes my participation in The Alphabet in Historical Fiction Challenge.

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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

The Fly by Katherine Mansfield

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on February 21, 2011
Posted in Short Story Read in 2011  | 8 Comments

Back in January, I reviewed The Doll’s House by Katherine Mansfield I found it to be a gem and said I wanted to read more by this author.  That is when John of The Book Mine Set recommended The Fly to me.

Mr. Woodifield is retire now because of the stroke he had however, he visits the office and his boss weekly.  On this visit he reminded his boss about the loss of his son.
Mr. Woodfield left but his boss was quite upset over the reminder of his dear son.  He tells his clerk that he is not to be disturbed for a half hour.  At first he just sits with a blank stare, thinking about his son.  His son has been dead for six years and he has not been able to cry and wonders whats wrong with him.
When he reaches for the photograph of his son he notices that there is a fly in his ink pot.  He rescues the fly and shakes him off on a peice of blotter paper.  The fly gets busy cleaning himself off and the boss pictures him rejoicing for being saved. However, then he toys around with the fly in a most disturbing way.

This very short story of about 7 pages really pack a punch.  It is one of mourning loss and the transference of emotions and power on to the defenseless.  Highly recommended.  You can read it here.

Also reviewed by:

Did you review this story?  Leave a link in the comments and I will post it here.

If you would like to participate in Short Story Mondays, go to John of The Book Mine Set. He has a short story review every Monday and a place for you to link your short story review. Come join in the fun!

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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

The Basement Room by Graham Greene

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on February 15, 2011
Posted in Short Story Read in 2011  | 8 Comments

Last year, Nan of Letters From a Hill Farm reviewed The Basement Room by Graham Greene.  Her convinced me that I had to read it for myself.

Philip’s parents are leaving him for two weeks,  in the care of  Mr. and Mrs. Baines, the butler housekeeper.  His most recent nurse left and they haven’t had time to fill her place.  Philip is 7 years old and likes to go to the basement where the Baines live.  He considers Mr’ Baines a friend and likes to hanout with him down there.
Mrs. Baines is left upstairs to do all the housework while Mr. Baines relaxes.  He doesn’t lift a finger to help well the master is away.  Mr. Baines tells Philip all kinds of tales from his life, including the time he lived in Africa.
One day Mrs. Baines was gone for the day, so Mr Baines and his lover took Philip out for the day.  After a long day, Philip was escorted up to bed and tucked in by both Baines and his lover.  Mrs. Baines arrived home and went directly to Philips rooms.  She asked him where Baines and the woman were but Philip, gripped with fear couldn’t answer.
“The night light stood beside the mirror and Mrs. Baines could see there her own reflection, misery and cruelty wavering in the glass, age and dust and nothing to hope for.”
Mrs. Baines left Philip’s room and started down the stair to look for the two lovers.
“Philip could move, he raised his knees, he sat up in bed; he wanted to die.  It wasn’t fair; the walls were down again between his world and theirs, but this time it was something worse than merriment that the grown people made him share. A passion moved the house he recognized but could not understand.”
By the end or the story, poor Philip is affected by the events that happened for life.

This was a well written story with good character development.  I got sucked in right away and cared what happened to Philip.  Greene captures the heart, mind, fears, and emotions of a little boy with poetic prose.  I highly recommend this story and you can read it here.

Did you review this story?  Please leave the link in the comments and I will link it here. 

If you would like to participate in Short Story Mondays, go to John of The Book Mine Set. He has a short story review every Monday and a place for you to link your short story review. Come join in the fun!

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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.