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 Novelists
5th Avenue Theatre, September
14, 1998
Biographies
Excerpts
Selected Works
Links
Biographies
Charles Frazier began Cold Mountain by digging up language
and legends buried deep in the backwoods of the southern Appalachians,
where his family has lived for 200 years. Frazier was not interested in
writing a novel that glorified the Civil War, but rather in recreating
the region's lost culture. His greatest challenge was to develop a voice
that would capture the spoken cadences of the oldest people he knew as
a child. "There was a musicality to their voices that isn't in Southern
accents today," he remembers. Listening to early Tommy Jarrell banjo
recordings, Frazier strove to capture the mood and rhythm of the culture.
To create the physical texture of 1860s Appalachia, Frazier pored over
old typescripts of local history, folklore, natural history, and Indian
legend, rejoicing when he found archaic words like "piggin"
(bucket) or "snath" (handle).
A graduate of the University of North Carolina, Frazier taught literature
at the University of Colorado in Boulder until his daughter was born and
he and his wife, Katherine, returned to North Carolina. Moved by the spiritual
nature of the land and the sense of community he encountered while attending
a local bluegrass festival, Frazier began to contemplate a book about
the southern Appalachian culture. When his father shared the story of
Frazier's great-great-uncle, W. P. Inman, a Confederate soldier who deserted
and walked home to Cold Mountain, Frazier was inspired. With encouragement
from Katherine, he quit teaching and began molding his family story into
an epic homecoming tale. Having no photograph of Inman, he took as a model
a portrait of his grandfather.
The result
of eight years of research and revision, Cold Mountain sold 1.6
million copies in its first nine months, won the 1997 National Book Award,
and was dubbed "as close to a masterpiece as American writing is
going to come."
Kaye
Gibbons, a native of North Carolina. She writes with the power, passion,
and tradition of the Southern culture. Gibbons' novels are set predominantly
in rural Southern communitiesallowing her characters to speak in
the idiomatic, direct language of her own upbringing. She savors the language
of the South, which she claims "used to be heavily metaphorical,
a very rich and dense language."
Gibbons had planned to become a teacher before her literary career was
launched with the success of her first novel, Ellen Foster (1987),
which began as a poem while Gibbons was a student at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The affecting story, told from the perspective
of a young country girl, went on to win the Sue Kaufman Prize for First
Fiction from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. "Ellen
Foster is emotionally autobiographical," Gibbons said. Like the heroine's
mother in Ellen Foster, Gibbons' own mother committed suicide when
Kaye was only ten, and the breakup of her family made it necessary for
her to live with a series of relatives. Gibbons insists that Ellen
Foster was written not to provide "an emotional catharsis, but
as an artistic exercise," wrote Publishers Weekly. Influenced
by the writing of early twentieth-century African American poet James
Weldon Johnson and his use of common speech patterns and idioms, Gibbons
notes, "I wanted to see if I could have a child use her voice to
talk about life, death, art, eternitybig things from a little person."
Throughout her novels, Gibbons' realistic portrayal of Southern life,
her use of dialogue, and her reliance on traditional moral and social
values create compelling and believable protagonists. From cancer victim
Ruby Stokes (A Virtuous Woman, 1989) to Hattie Barnes, a young
woman struggling with her mother's mental illness (Sights Unseen,
1995), Gibbons' strong central characters possess a grounding and wisdom
that transcend the often difficult circumstances of their lives.
Gibbons admits that the writer's life is a strenuous one, but adds, "I
wouldn't want to do anything easy." She reflects: "As a writer,
it's my job to come up with three hundred pages or so every two years.
Each time I begin, I know it's going to happen, but I'm scared it won't.
It's working with that element of fear that keeps a book going,"
a process she also likens to "looking over an abyss and knowing I
have to jump."
Excerpt
taken from Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain (1997)
Inman could see west for scores of miles. Crest and scarp and crag, stacked
and grey, to the long horizon. Cataloochee, the Cherokee word was. Meaning
waves of mountains in fading rows. And this day the waves could hardly
be differed from the raw winter sky. Both were barred and marbled with
the same shades of grey only, so the outlook stretched high and low like
a great slab of streaked meat. Inman himself could not have been better
dressed to conceal himself amid this world, for all he wore was grey and
black and dirty white.
Bleak as the scene was, though, there was growing joy in Inman's heart.
He was nearing home; he could feel it in the touch of thin air on skin,
in his longing to see the leap of hearth smoke from the houses of people
he had known all his life. People he would not be called upon to hate
or fear. He rose and took a wide stance on a rock and stood and pinched
down his eyes to sharpen the view across the vast prospect to one far
mountain. It stood apart from the sky only as the stroke of a poorly inked
pen, a line thin and quick and gestural. But the shape slowly grew plain
and unmistakable. It was to Cold Mountain he looked. He had achieved a
vista of what for him was homeland.
Excerpt taken from On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon (1998)
I recall, fifty-eight years thence, my extreme horror of recognition that
the man standing underneath the spready sycamore had probably done wrong,
that he had probably murdered with vile intent, and that all my night-fears
of atrocities incited by the Turner rebellion would come true now. . .
.
Weighing the two, my surety that my father had indeed meant to kill whoever
had ailed him and the prospect of Negroes murdering us all in the moonlight,
I had more faith in the Negroes, more trust in their inherent and collective
sense of right. Even then, at twelve, I knew that my father was a liar.
Although he had served two terms in the legislature and was known all
over Virginia to be an honest, upright, hearty, and earnest Episcopalian,
I knew he had a dark secret. Children see into the recesses of the soul.
They are rarely fooled, seldom duped save at rummy and shell games, so
it was not extraordinary for me to stand in that doorway, while my father
demanded of God and a brace of Negroes that they acknowledge his innocence,
to see that he was lying to all, for I knew him. I was not now struck
down in sudden disillusionment of a beloved parent, for I had heard him
delivering my mother his fury in the nights.
| Selected
Works |
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Charles
Frazier
Cold Mountain (1997)
Kaye Gibbons
Ellen Foster (1987)
A Virtuous Woman (1989)
A Cure for Dreams (1991)
Charms for the Easy Life (1993)
Sights Unseen (1995)
On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon (1998)
Raised by Hand (2002)
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Web
Site Links
Interview
with Frazier
Reading group guide
to Cold Mountain
An interview
with Gibbons
Reading group guide
to Ellen Foster
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