osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Bill Brittain’s The Wish-Giver: Three Tales of Coven Tree, a Newbery Honor book in which a salesman rolls up at a church social, sells four wishes (a mere fifty cents a pop), and then rolls out of town, leaving his customers to deal with the chaos that their poorly conceived wishes create. I felt a little bit that the wishes were intentionally badly worded so as to have the most dramatic effects (a girl wishes that a traveling salesman would “put down roots,” which ends up turning him into a tree, when what she really wants is for him to fall in love with her - why wouldn’t she just wish for that?) - but I did enjoy the down home country narrative voice, which was flavorful without being over the top.

I also read Sally Belfrage’s Un-American Activities: A Memoir of the Fifties, which is more introspective than her other books that I’ve read (A Room in Moscow, Freedom Summer) and suffers for it: Belfrage is oddly opaque in describing herself, unable to dig beneath the surface as she can in describing 1950s Moscow or 1964 Mississippi. She talks about the split consciousness of her childhood, learning about American democracy and freedom in school while at home her father (who edits a leftist newspaper, The National Guardian) is under constant surveillance by the FBI for his political views, but it comes to feel repetitious, like we’re circling around some greater truth without ever really zeroing in on it.

The book is effective at evoking the terror of the 1950s Red Scare, however, and the way that it decimated progressive circles, by destroying some progressives’ lives and careers (through arrest or employment blackballing) and frightening the rest into silence. What struck me, as I read this, is that the culture war in America is not anything new; the only thing that’s changed is that progressives finally have the numbers to effectively fight back. (They certainly didn’t in the 1950s, when “78 percent of Americans said they thought it was a good idea to report relatives or acquaintances suspected of being Communists.” A nation of stool pigeons!)

I also liked this quote: “My father lived on hope, and made hope his chief bequest to me: a lifetime’s basic faith in people, which must be disabused daily, when every morning’s newspaper comes as a blow to the naive optimism that somehow grew again in the night as you lay helpless to defend yourself.”

What I’m Reading Now

Other people keep hogging door duty at work so I haven’t had as much time to read Gerald Durrell’s Fillets of Plaice as I would have liked. :( On the other hand, this means that I get to savor it for longer, so that’s nice??? This book is actually five mini-memoirs stuck together; I just finished the one where the Durrells settle briefly in London after leaving Corfu in advance of World War II, and young Gerry fills his time by getting a job in a reptile pet shop. He accidentally befriends a colonel after dropping a box of terrapins on a bus, and it turns out the colonel has filled the attic of his house with meticulously painted model soldiers for use in hours-long war games.

I’m also reading Jeff Dickey’s Rising in Flames: Sherman’s March and the Fight for a New Nation, from which I learned (1) German and Irish immigrant identity in the 1860s were both A Big Deal (actually I knew this already, but it’s easier to ignore when you don’t have a book shoving it in your face), so I can’t just give Russell a German father and an Irish mother (what church did they marry in, by the way? Are they both Catholic?) and skip merrily onward giving it ne’er a further thought, and (2) I almost certainly have Russell marching with the whole entire wrong army for the backstory I’ve given him. If he joins up from an Eastern college, he would march with the Army of the Potomac, not the Army of the Tennessee.

(I can’t make him Catholic and let him keep a fiancee with the incredibly WASPy name “Julia Gage.” Surely the Gages would collapse in prostration at the prospect of their daughter marrying a Papist.)

I strongly suspect that I’ve Dunning-Krugered myself. “Oh, I definitely know enough about the Civil War to write a book about a Civil War veteran who wakes up in 1964!” I cried, knowing next to nothing about the Civil War, in which happy state of ignorance I’ve already written a book featuring TWO Civil War veterans. At least The Threefold Tie has no historical pretensions (at least about the Civil War, it definitely has historical pretensions about Non-Monogamous Nineteenth Century American Marriage Customs) and simply uses the Civil War as an excuse for Jack and Everett to make out in a barn.

What I Plan to Read Next

A footnote in Emily Mayhew’s Wounded (I’m still working my way through) has led me to Jeffrey S. Reznick’s Healing the Nation: Soldiers and the Culture of Caregiving in Britain During the Great War, which I hope might be more helpful in answering my question “So what were the prospects for a double leg amputee following the Great War?” than Wounded, although it will almost certainly be less mind-blowing and unbedizened by poetry.

Date: 2020-11-25 02:19 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: (miroku)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
What you say about the Red Scare period fits with what my father says, which is that scary as Trump has been, the 1950s period felt even scarier. He had to sign a loyalty oath to take up a teaching job.

I wonder what the larger truth might have been that the author couldn't manage to zero in on. Maybe it was something personal--unrelated to her main thesis--but in trying to write about her thesis, she kept on being drawn near to it.

Date: 2020-11-26 12:40 am (UTC)
kore: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kore
Yeah, what was terrifying for me under Shrub was how quickly civil liberties got rolled back, often with the full-throated appreciation of The PublicTM, and how everything was justified in the name of Patriotism and if you criticized it at all you were "with the terrorists." That was the era where someone on LJ got a visit from the FBI because someone got mad at her and passed along a joke she made about Bush. And the media just totally went along with it all, when the headlines weren't written by outright Shrub plants (that woman who won a Pulitzer for the NYT peddling Gulf War lies).

Date: 2020-11-25 04:30 pm (UTC)
skygiants: Audrey Hepburn peering around a corner disguised in giant sunglasses, from Charade (sneaky like hepburnninja)
From: [personal profile] skygiants
Yeah, when Trump got elected, I remember at that Thanksgiving talking with my family about whether anything else they'd lived through had made them feel as frightened about the future -- and my great-aunt said McCarthy was the only thing that compared for her, that some of her teachers got blacklisted and completely disappeared and that was terrifying, but she was too young then to feel as scared as she did in 2016.

(Meanwhile, my dad said he felt almost as bad when Reagan was elected, but for better or worse you knew exactly what he was going to do, so there wasn't the terror of uncertainty, and my mom said that the Cold War bomb drills and the Cuban Missile Crisis scared her more viscerally.)

Date: 2020-11-25 05:14 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Interesting: I think too the level of fear one feels probably depends also on the nature of the threat (nuclear annihilation is a different kind of scary than Big Brother Is Watching You) and how old you are and how much other stuff you've lived through.

Date: 2020-11-25 03:11 pm (UTC)
missroserose: (Default)
From: [personal profile] missroserose
Oh man, sympathies on the Dunning-Kruger discovery. That was totally how I felt when I disappeared down the rabbit hole of 80s punk subculture only to discover that Billy Hargrove was (in fact) a metalhead, sworn enemy of the punks. XD On the upside, I know a lot of fascinating stuff about the punk movement now!

I think you're probably wise to be careful about getting the history right (Civil War history being such an identity-maker in our culture). Brian points out (with the saltiness of a person of an oft-mischaracterized ethnic background who works in an oft-mischaracterized field—"Sure, I summon the ancestral spirits while I hack the Gibson! Every other Thursday!") that the immigrant identity part is probably going to have relatively fewer people who care about it. Which isn't to say it's not worth getting right, but maybe don't beat yourself up too much about almost missing it.

I swear, writing history is like picking your way through a minefield at times. If only we had some way of knowing whether the things we're missing are squibs, or full-on claymores...

Date: 2020-11-25 05:19 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Did you want to make him Irish for that reason? I was surprised by the switch, to be honest. I liked it when the nursemaid was Irish and he was not: having both his parents be heartless and class-proud seemed good to me. It seemed complicated to add in the Irish heritage because then .... did that mean his awful dad didn't mind marrying an Irish girl? Or was she from some nouveau riche family? (Were there already nouveau riche Irish families by that time?) But then again you have all of the American South, which had **lots** of people of Scots-Irish heritage--but they were *Protestant* Irish from the north who hated Catholics. But anyway, your character is not from the South. etc. etc.

Long-winded way of saying that I was curious as to why you decided to make him of Irish heritage.

Date: 2020-11-25 05:08 pm (UTC)
copperfyre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] copperfyre
Reading this has made me want to read Fillets of Plaice, because it's so delightful and never fails to make me happy.

I love that quote about hope. And really interesting and sobering to think about how much less potential there was for fighting back in the 50s.

Date: 2020-11-25 05:45 pm (UTC)
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
From: [personal profile] rachelmanija
Me too! I had forgotten the story about the colonel and his tin soldiers. I loved that one.

Date: 2020-11-25 05:37 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Rotwang)
From: [personal profile] sovay
The Wish-Giver: Three Tales of Coven Tree

I haven't thought about this book in literally decades! I read it in elementary school. There are at least two other Coven Tree books. All have that folkloric quality.

Date: 2020-11-25 10:55 pm (UTC)
conuly: (Default)
From: [personal profile] conuly
Wait, there are two other books!?

Date: 2020-11-25 11:02 pm (UTC)
sovay: (I Claudius)
From: [personal profile] sovay
Wait, there are two other books!?

The two I remember are Dr. Dredd's Wagon of Wonders (1987) and Professor Popkin's Prodigious Polish (1990). I can't remember if I've read Devil's Donkey (1981), which is the other one the internet tells me exists. I have vivid memories of the covers of the other two.

Date: 2020-11-26 05:57 am (UTC)
teenybuffalo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] teenybuffalo
I have lots of love for "Devil's Donkey," in which an idiot teenager makes poor decisions and gets transmogrified by a local witch, then given as a gift to a Mr. Beel passing through town (a donkey, why? because apparently damned souls are most palatable and transportable as donkeys, I guess? Never thought about that before). Mr. Beel is an olde tyme Yankee pedlar, the kind who sells wooden nutmegs. I sadly can't find the illustration of how awful he looks when he smiles, but trust me, it's bad stuff. For the rest, the book's like a PG-rated "The Golden Ass" as the protagonist haplessly gets bought and sold and makes a poor impression on the girl he loves.

Date: 2020-11-25 06:02 pm (UTC)
ancientreader: sebastian stan as bucky looking pensive (Default)
From: [personal profile] ancientreader
I hope you're able to work out the historical ISSUES, but meanwhile thank you for making me bark-laugh. ("I strongly suspect that I've Dunning-Krugered myself.") And, seriously, I have so much respect for the depth of your historical reading & knowledge.

Date: 2020-11-25 10:54 pm (UTC)
conuly: (Default)
From: [personal profile] conuly
a girl wishes that a traveling salesman would “put down roots,” which ends up turning him into a tree, when what she really wants is for him to fall in love with her - why wouldn’t she just wish for that?

She was sufficiently dim and naive that she thought he was in love with her, just ever-so-slightly more in love with the road.

Also, I think it's a key of the wish-giving genre that people in these stories have never once heard a story in which wishes go wrong, or else they would have planned out their wishes better. IRL, I like to imagine most of us, like the protagonist of Time at the Top, have already planned out our three wishes to provide maximum benefit with a minimum of risk. (Alas for her, she didn't get three wishes! She got three trips into the past. It works out well enough anyway.)

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