|
Old South Meets the New South in Mary Ward Brown's Long-Awaited Collection
October 17, 2002
"'I'm
Rose Pardue, of Rosemont,' Rose had introduced herself as a girl. It had been
her open sesame all over the Black Belt of Alabama. She fixed her once-famous
eyes on the girl by her bed." So begins the first story of Mary Ward Brown's
new collection, It Wasn't All Dancing and Other Stories, published by
the University of Alabama Press (UAP) as part of its Deep South Book series.
In this story, Brown, who won a PEN/Hemingway award in 1987, explores what Rose
Pardue discovers when, as an elderly, genteel Southern Belle, she develops an
uncommon friendship with a young, black working woman. The theme of the living
past negotiating contemporary currents appears throughout the collection.
"I wrote this story because of my fascination with the mystique of the
Southern Belle and the lives they led, which are now extinct. It has died out
in the last 10 years," Brown told BTW in a recent interview. "Those
women traditionally had credentials, money, and looks. They had fabulous lives.
They went to cotillions, had a number of proposals, and were virgins. They still
had trials and tribulations, even though they were always dancing. I wanted
to see how the Southern Belle would relate to today's black woman."
Brown was raised in Marion Junction, Alabama, on a 1,500-acre farm, owned by
her farmer father and her career woman mother. She said that she writes about
race because it's a dominant issue in her area. "This is the Black Belt
of Alabama. The old plantation of the South," said Brown. "The soil
is black and very fertile. This is where the cotton plantations once had slaves.
Today, blacks have returned home and now make up the majority."
It Wasn't All Dancing reveals the lives of ordinary people at critical
turning points, as Old South traditions are juxtaposed with New South revelations.
Most of the 11 stories were previously published in such national magazines
and literary journals as The Atlantic Monthly, Grand Street Magazine,
and The Threepenny Review. In Brown's fictional world, a bedridden Southern
Belle is dependent upon her black nurse; a new widow is uncomforted by well-meaning
Christians; and a middle-aged waitress falls in love with the town catch but
gives him up for her daughter's happiness.
Daniel Waterman, acquisitions editor for UAP's A Deep South Book imprint, told
BTW that what makes Brown's collection so engaging is her richness of
detail and her strong sense of time and place. "But above all, she has
an acute sense of the fragility of every relationship, and a knack for showing
how the most ordinary lives are filled with high stakes."
"I will always strive to make a human connection in my storytelling,"
said Brown. "I would like people to say that I'm telling the truth about
the human condition as I know it."
Brown began writing in the 1950s and quickly found an agent. But when her father
died and left her the family farm, her husband, a director of student affairs
at Auburn University, quit his job so they could move to the farm. Feeling guilty
that her husband, who had no farming experience, left a good job -- she turned
her back on writing for 25 years. After her husband's death, she located her
agent again and published her story, "Amaryllis," in McCall's
magazine. Her first short story collection, Tongues of Flame, was published
in 1986.
"I love the short story form, it seems to fit the way I think and work,"
said Brown. "I'm proud to be a Southern writer, but I didn't want to be
a regional writer."
Waterman doesn't see Brown as a regional writer. "Readers, both regionally
and nationally, have been waiting for another collection by Ms. Brown for years,"
said Waterman. "We understood and suspected the book would be received
enthusiastically, but demand for the book, and for Ms. Brown as a speaker, and
the critical reception of the book have been tremendous."
Deep South Books began as an imprint of UAP in 1999, when the press saw an
opportunity to publish contemporary novels, short stories, nonfiction, and memoir
of literary merit by contemporary Southern writers.
"We started by acquiring the paperback reprint rights to the works of
contemporary Southern writers we admired and whose stories we believed would
be of interest to both regional and national audiences," explained Waterman.
"Some of our authors had published exceptional books that we have been
able to return to print, and other authors in the series simply wanted the attention
to detail we are able to offer as a small publisher. As the series has grown,
we've published more and more original works of fiction and memoir, which have
been very successful, and we hope to publish more original works down the road."
The press has built the imprint by keeping an eye out for writers whose work
they admire. They also use a network of colleagues who follow contemporary Southern
writing and who direct their attention to particular works or authors. Some
of the authors on their list include Vicki Covington, author of The Last
Hotel for Women and Gathering Home; Roy Hoffman, author of Almost
Family; and Howell Raines, executive editor of the New York Times
and author of the novel Whiskey Man.
"We hope that the long-term commitment we make to them will lead them
to bring their future work to us," said Waterman. "Mary Ward Brown's
coming to us with her long-awaited second collection is a perfect case in point.
We reprinted her first collection, Tongues of Flame, in 1993. It received
the 1987 Alabama Library Association Award and the 1991 Lillian Smith Book Award."
For Brown, writing fiction is like being in a room with all kinds of toys.
"You get inspired from whatever's around you and make it your own."
-- Gayle Herbert Robinson
Topics: News - Books, News - Regional, Specialty Bookselling, African American,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|