A Childhood is the unforgettable memoir of Harry Crews' earliest years, a sharply remembered portrait of the people, locales, and circumstances that shaped him―and destined him to be a storyteller. Crews was born in the middle of the Great Depression, in a one-room sharecropper's cabin at the end of a dirt road in rural South Georgia. If Bacon County was a place of grinding poverty, poor soil, and blood feuds, it was also a deeply mystical place, where snakes talked, birds could possess a small boy by spitting in his mouth, and faith healers and conjure women kept ghosts and devils at bay.
At once shocking and elegiac, heartrending and comical, A Childhood not only recalls the transforming events of Crews's youth but conveys his growing sense of self in a world "in which survival depended on raw courage, a courage born out of desperation and sustained by a lack of alternatives."
Amid portraits of relatives and neighbors, Bacon County lore, and details of farm life, Crews tells of his father's death; his friendship with Willalee Bookatee, the son of a black hired hand; his bout with polio; his mother and stepfather's failing marriage; his near-fatal scalding at a hog-killing; and a five-month sojourn in Jacksonville, Florida. These and other memories define, with reverence and affection, Harry Crews's childhood world: "its people and its customs and all its loveliness and all its ugliness." Imaginative and gripping, A Childhood re-creates in detail one writer's search for past and self, a search for a time and place lost forever except in memory.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Crews is, obviously, a unique southern raconteur. . . . It's easy to despise poor folks. A Childhood makes it more difficult. It raises almost to a level of heroism these people who seem of a different century. A Childhood is not about a forgotten America, it is about a part of America that has rarely, except in books like this, been properly discovered.
(New York Times Book Review)It is Crews' great gift that he can show us how absolutely cursed, and alsolutely beautiful, we are. . . . Crews burns through the easy ways in which we would like to regard ourselves; what he leaves behind is something better, something touched by the refiner's fire.
(New York Newsday)"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Shipping:
US$ 4.00
Within U.S.A.
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. New. Fast Shipping and good customer service. Seller Inventory # Holz_New_0820317594
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. Prompt service guaranteed. Seller Inventory # Clean0820317594
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. New. Seller Inventory # Wizard0820317594
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. Buy for Great customer experience. Seller Inventory # GoldenDragon0820317594
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. New Copy. Customer Service Guaranteed. Seller Inventory # think0820317594
Book Description Condition: new. Seller Inventory # FrontCover0820317594
Book Description Condition: New. Buy with confidence! Book is in new, never-used condition 0.95. Seller Inventory # bk0820317594xvz189zvxnew
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: new. Brand New Copy. Seller Inventory # BBB_new0820317594
Book Description Condition: New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! 0.94. Seller Inventory # Q-0820317594