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The Rock Cried Out (1979)

par Ellen Douglas

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552471,054 (1.5)16
This story of the modern South, of love denied and love fulfilled, is a powerful account of the potential for violence that underlies this country's passionate history. Ellen Douglas, a native of Mississippi and a prize-winning novelist of rare distinction, reveals the turbulent changes that rocked the South in the sixties and continue to this day. No event is predictable in this powerful novel. A young man who has spent several years in the North returns to his native Mississippi seeking rural peace. But solitude is not to be his, for soon he is caught up again in a traumatic event that happened seven years before in 1964--the death in an auto accident of the beautiful young cousin whom he loved. As the story unfolds, the people who were involved in that senseless tragedy reveal their part in it, and as they do, the reader becomes intensely involved not only in their lives but in what it means to be black or white in the modern South.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 16 mentions

2 sur 2
Gorgeous writing and Douglas gives you a beautiful sense of place, making me want to visit Mississippi, something no other book has done. But (spoilers ahead) in this book about racism, she's ultimately too easy on the white characters who aren't Klansmen because they're racist, but just because they're bored and like being with men. Or the narrator's parasitic white family, living off the sweat and blood of the same black family for generations, but, well, that's the way it goes & we're all friends now. You can't write about this stuff and then back off from its consequences just because you're uncomfortable. So for writing and everything up until the end, I'd give it a 4.5. For the "we're all friends here after all" ending, I'd give it the coward's 1 it deserves, so I’m averaging them.

Coming back to this in 2020, I have even less patience for it now. I don’t know what the math is math is, but it’s a 1. ( )
  susanbooks | Nov 29, 2018 |
I gave up after 66 pages. Maybe this New Yorker couldn't relate to the book's strong sense of place of the South. Written under a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, the novel has a classy pedigree but I just couldn't appreciate it. ( )
  ennie | Jul 5, 2011 |
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I went to the rock to hide my face.
The rock cried out, 'No hiding place.'
No hiding place down here.
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The Rock Cried Out (1979) is one of the most ambitious novels by a Southern writer to appear in the last two decades and, in the context of Southern literature, perhaps a rather unusual one. (Introduction)
I got off the bus at the intersection, wearing my old army surplus trench coat, carrying my backpack, my portable typewriter, and a suitcase full of books and papers, and walked two blocks to the overpass through which the road ran out toward Chickasaw Ridge.
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This story of the modern South, of love denied and love fulfilled, is a powerful account of the potential for violence that underlies this country's passionate history. Ellen Douglas, a native of Mississippi and a prize-winning novelist of rare distinction, reveals the turbulent changes that rocked the South in the sixties and continue to this day. No event is predictable in this powerful novel. A young man who has spent several years in the North returns to his native Mississippi seeking rural peace. But solitude is not to be his, for soon he is caught up again in a traumatic event that happened seven years before in 1964--the death in an auto accident of the beautiful young cousin whom he loved. As the story unfolds, the people who were involved in that senseless tragedy reveal their part in it, and as they do, the reader becomes intensely involved not only in their lives but in what it means to be black or white in the modern South.

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