Crimes grow in rich Appalachian soil
Sharyn McCrumb's 'The Devil Amongst the Lawyers' and Vicki Lane's 'The Day of Small Things' find a rare mix of thriller elements in a particular region.
Say the word "Appalachia" in some variant or another and the probability is pretty high that someone will come back with a humorous remark — or one he or she thinks is funny, but isn't. It's a region that stretches as far north as the state of New York and as far south as the mid-point of Mississippi, with more than 23 million strong living within boundaries that first began to be recognized as a distinct entity in the 19th century. And yet, the snickers emitted when South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford claimed, in 2009, that he was "hiking the Appalachian Trail" — rather than own up to an extramarital affair — had as much to do with the culturally backward connotations of his excuse as the scandal itself.
It's easier to make fun of something one doesn't understand, and Appalachia's mix of strong religious ties, farming, crop cultivation and Cherokee Indian folklore produces a brew that might be even more potent than the moonshine the region was long famous for. As a result, the crime fiction that originates from Appalachia teems with pungent smells and sounds and is steeped in the roots of generations of families — and, of course, in blood, especially of past sins coming due in the present.
The undisputed queen of such fiction — even though she has repeatedly professed to loathe being categorized this way — is Sharyn McCrumb. Her series of eight Ballad novels, beginning with "If I Ever Return, Pretty Peggy-O" (1990) and most recently adding "The Devil Amongst the Lawyers" (Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's: 336 pp., $24.99) explores Appalachian history and folklore through an autobiographical lens (McCrumb's family settled in the western North Carolina mountains in the 1790s). Each book is set at a different historical point in time, incorporating real murder cases and pinned structurally on the rhythms of real songs; the series features generations of recurring characters — the predominant, and most beloved by fans, being Nora Bonesteel, a "wise woman" gifted with second sight.
"The Devil Amongst the Lawyers" flashes back to 1935, when the country was mired in the Depression, the Appalachian region hit especially hard. The situation is exacerbated on a national scale when a schoolteacher is tried for murdering her father, and incoming media from urban areas see fit to mock the mountain town for its rural ways. Nora, here age 12, is new to her gift, and immediately she's seized on by her newspaperman cousin to ferret out the real truth about the murder in the absence of tangible evidence. While the story falters near the end, McCrumb's obvious love of the region never wavers and offers a lesson or two for those on America's East and West poles who dare sneer down at those living in-between.
While McCrumb pens a new Ballad novel only every few years, those looking for a fix will be well-satisified by the novels of Vicki Lane, who dwells on a mountain farm in North Carolina. She first attracted attention in crime fiction circles with her series featuring Elizabeth Goodweather, a 50-ish proprietor of an herb and flower garden with an open heart and a curious mind about beliefs she may not necessarily share. Those traits serve her well as an amateur sleuth looking into crimes in Ridley Branch, where members of militia groups, back-to-the-landers, believers in extraterrestrials and fundamentalist Christians all dwell together, uncomfortably enough to throw up a murder every now and then.
With "The Day of Small Things" (Dell: 414 pp., $7.99 paper), Lane moves away from the series and more in a direction first traveled by both McCrumb and Carolyn Wall, author of the excellent 2008 novel "Sweeping Up Glass" (Delta: 336 pp., $15 paper). Lane uses a traumatic birth scene to introduce us to a baby whose mother, in a fit of pique from too many babies birthed already, names her Least — and proceeds to treat her youngest child with disdain, neglect and, occasionally, abuse.
Employing a langorous prose style inflected with mountain dialect, Lane unspools the arc of Least's life, from her grandmother's discovery that she has The Sight ("I knowed the first minute I seen the child Least that she had the Gifts — could read it in her eyes — though it was likewise clear she hadn't no idea of what the Gifts are and how she might use them") to marriage to a man deeply wedded to the Church (and less to the more magical elements of Least's abilities). She takes readers into Least's current life, nearer to the end than the beginning, and a threat on her final years cast by the arrival of a dangerous criminal. With these changes come changes to her name, as Least sheds her horrible moniker for the more fitting one of Birdie (or, sometimes, Little Bird), which connotes the free spirit she grows into and the spirits she is in semi-constant contact with.
"The Day of Small Things" shines as a chronicle of Depression-era Appalachia and the coming-of-age of Lane's protagonist, who starts out with wings clipped and later lets them go free. When danger hits as Birdie grows very old, Lane isn't quite as skillful at evoking the suspense necessary to warrant our fear that Birdie won't leave the world on her own terms. But like McCrumb, Lane demonstrates how deeply she feels part of her Appalachian home, how tied she is to the land and the pulsating beats that can't quite be found elsewhere.
Weinman blogs about crime and mystery fiction at http://www.sarahweinman.com. "Dark Passages" appears monthly at latimes.com/books.
It's easier to make fun of something one doesn't understand, and Appalachia's mix of strong religious ties, farming, crop cultivation and Cherokee Indian folklore produces a brew that might be even more potent than the moonshine the region was long famous for. As a result, the crime fiction that originates from Appalachia teems with pungent smells and sounds and is steeped in the roots of generations of families — and, of course, in blood, especially of past sins coming due in the present.
The undisputed queen of such fiction — even though she has repeatedly professed to loathe being categorized this way — is Sharyn McCrumb. Her series of eight Ballad novels, beginning with "If I Ever Return, Pretty Peggy-O" (1990) and most recently adding "The Devil Amongst the Lawyers" (Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's: 336 pp., $24.99) explores Appalachian history and folklore through an autobiographical lens (McCrumb's family settled in the western North Carolina mountains in the 1790s). Each book is set at a different historical point in time, incorporating real murder cases and pinned structurally on the rhythms of real songs; the series features generations of recurring characters — the predominant, and most beloved by fans, being Nora Bonesteel, a "wise woman" gifted with second sight.
"The Devil Amongst the Lawyers" flashes back to 1935, when the country was mired in the Depression, the Appalachian region hit especially hard. The situation is exacerbated on a national scale when a schoolteacher is tried for murdering her father, and incoming media from urban areas see fit to mock the mountain town for its rural ways. Nora, here age 12, is new to her gift, and immediately she's seized on by her newspaperman cousin to ferret out the real truth about the murder in the absence of tangible evidence. While the story falters near the end, McCrumb's obvious love of the region never wavers and offers a lesson or two for those on America's East and West poles who dare sneer down at those living in-between.
While McCrumb pens a new Ballad novel only every few years, those looking for a fix will be well-satisified by the novels of Vicki Lane, who dwells on a mountain farm in North Carolina. She first attracted attention in crime fiction circles with her series featuring Elizabeth Goodweather, a 50-ish proprietor of an herb and flower garden with an open heart and a curious mind about beliefs she may not necessarily share. Those traits serve her well as an amateur sleuth looking into crimes in Ridley Branch, where members of militia groups, back-to-the-landers, believers in extraterrestrials and fundamentalist Christians all dwell together, uncomfortably enough to throw up a murder every now and then.
With "The Day of Small Things" (Dell: 414 pp., $7.99 paper), Lane moves away from the series and more in a direction first traveled by both McCrumb and Carolyn Wall, author of the excellent 2008 novel "Sweeping Up Glass" (Delta: 336 pp., $15 paper). Lane uses a traumatic birth scene to introduce us to a baby whose mother, in a fit of pique from too many babies birthed already, names her Least — and proceeds to treat her youngest child with disdain, neglect and, occasionally, abuse.
Employing a langorous prose style inflected with mountain dialect, Lane unspools the arc of Least's life, from her grandmother's discovery that she has The Sight ("I knowed the first minute I seen the child Least that she had the Gifts — could read it in her eyes — though it was likewise clear she hadn't no idea of what the Gifts are and how she might use them") to marriage to a man deeply wedded to the Church (and less to the more magical elements of Least's abilities). She takes readers into Least's current life, nearer to the end than the beginning, and a threat on her final years cast by the arrival of a dangerous criminal. With these changes come changes to her name, as Least sheds her horrible moniker for the more fitting one of Birdie (or, sometimes, Little Bird), which connotes the free spirit she grows into and the spirits she is in semi-constant contact with.
"The Day of Small Things" shines as a chronicle of Depression-era Appalachia and the coming-of-age of Lane's protagonist, who starts out with wings clipped and later lets them go free. When danger hits as Birdie grows very old, Lane isn't quite as skillful at evoking the suspense necessary to warrant our fear that Birdie won't leave the world on her own terms. But like McCrumb, Lane demonstrates how deeply she feels part of her Appalachian home, how tied she is to the land and the pulsating beats that can't quite be found elsewhere.
Weinman blogs about crime and mystery fiction at http://www.sarahweinman.com. "Dark Passages" appears monthly at latimes.com/books.
Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times
Bravo-- a superb review....
ReplyDeletejoanny
Vicki, congratulations on the glowing review from the LA Times. Though their headline DOES make one wince; the implication being that fertile soil breeds equally fertile quantities of crime. Gawd.
ReplyDeleteThis is pretty cool for me! Thanks, Joanny! And yes, Dave, it is a little cringe-worthy. These sensationalist newspapers!
ReplyDeleteSuper exciting Vicki. Congrats. So happy for you!
ReplyDeleteOverall a good review tho' I dinna agree on th' last part. I found it to be more suspenseful, especially leading up to th' "Laurel Hell" part!
ReplyDeleteI'd say your quite the skillful evoker of suspense :)
Thanks, Barb and Subby.
ReplyDeleteSubby, I think that the second half is definitely different from the first half -- and some people may prefer the first. But in all I'm pretty thrilled with this review!
I was thrilled for you, when I read this, Vicki. Great stuff!
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful Vicki and so too is The Day of Small Things. I am thoroughly enjoying it, am nearing the end and it's very tense just now. A wonderful read.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, and I enjoyed this book as well.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations Vicki,
ReplyDeleteThat's a great review!
Star
Wonderful, Vicki! I'm so glad the Times paid notice where it is due. Congratulations.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations!! What a wonderful review.
ReplyDeleteReading The Day of Small Things now.
I've almost finished the book! And I think it's fabulous. You know how to develop a character and let it grow from an uncertain, bashful child into a loving, caring, strong woman.
ReplyDeleteThanks for alwaqys visiting!
What a lovely tribute! I'm reading the book now, and the only reason I haven't finished it yet is because I'm saving it for a time when I don't have to rush. It's truly lovely.
ReplyDeleteLovely! I'm so glad you're being noticed--and appreciated.
ReplyDeleteThank you all so much! As many of you know, I had quite a time with this book -- it didn't come easy. So glad that it's being read and enjoyed!
ReplyDeleteThat's brilliant - well done. It's so lovely when people appreciate our work... writing, photos, food or whatever. I'm very pleased for you.
ReplyDeleteWell deserved- KUDOS! I am really enjoying this book!
ReplyDeleteVicki, congratulations on the review in the LA Times! I didn't agree with the reviewer's assessment of your 'suspense' skills. I think you're VERY good at creating and sustaining suspenseful situations.
ReplyDeleteVicki, I just finished "Day of Small Things" and enjoyed it so much! What I like is that what you wrote is so original and true. You won't see this story in multiple forms out there, but it is a wonderful tale of life and good and evil and magic and faith and reality. It was a true joy for me.
ReplyDeleteGreat review though the headline could better have read Intriguing Stories Grow.... Congratulations...and thanks for the time, effort, thought, love, and creativity you share with readers in each of your books.
ReplyDeleteLynne in GA
Thanks, all of you! I'm still thrilled over this notice in a big newspaper.
ReplyDeleteThe Times did you up proud! I'm so delighted. Now if only an old woman who merely writes about life in the foothills of Indiana can find an agent. Trust me when I lament that the "foothills of Indiana" is not nearly as interesting as the Appalachian mountains. (either I need bigger hills, or an agent who aims low)
ReplyDeletePeople are interesting anywhere, Dana...
ReplyDeleteAn achievement for sure! I will get this book, where is it selling?
ReplyDeleteHey, Pat -- It might be at your local bookstore or you could ask them to order it. Or on line from Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
ReplyDelete