The Commercial Appeal

‘Southern Writers on Writing’ is entertaini­ng, perceptive

- Ed Tarkington | Chapter16.org

While making the media rounds after winning the National Book Award for his debut novel, “The Moviegoer,” Walker Percy was asked by more than one curious New York journalist why the South produces so many good writers. His pat response: “Because we lost the war.” Not long afterward, in an essay titled “The Regional Writer,” Flannery O’Connor expanded on Percy’s remark. “What he was saying was that we have had our Fall,” O’Connor wrote. “We have gone into the modern world with an inburnt knowledge of our human limitation­s and with a sense of mystery which could not have developed in our first state of innocence — as it has not sufficient­ly developed in the rest of the country.”

Despite having been answered again and again in manners both as curt as Percy’s and as thoughtful as O’Connor’s, the question persists, drenched as it is with inherent condescens­ion. One suspects that a more honest query would sound something like this: “How could a region so reputedly backwards, anti-intellectu­al, bigoted, misogynist­ic, uneducated and retrograde in its politics give the world the likes of Faulkner, O’Connor, Welty and Percy or, more recently, Donna Tartt, Tayari Jones, Percival Everett, Jesmyn Ward and Tom Franklin?”

Neverthele­ss, we Southern writers take the bait every time. The only thing we love as much as telling stories is explaining where they come from. We bristle at the contempt our Northern compatriot­s express for our homeland and take pride in the solidarity of our ilk — never mind that the small hamlets of Mississipp­i are about as far in every imaginable way from the high rises of Atlanta as is Kansas from the Land of Oz.

The label “Southern Writer” is a mixed blessing indeed, though, as is the case with most blessings, better embraced Edited by Susan Cushman. University Press of Mississipp­i. 192 pages. $28.

If you go

Susan Cushman will join writers Corey Mesler, Niles Reddick, Sally Palmer Thomason and Claude Wilkinson for a discussion of “Southern Writers on Writing” at 1 p.m. Saturday at Novel in Memphis. or tolerated than denied. “Southern Writers on Writing,” a new anthology of essays edited by Susan Cushman, is not the first attempt to plumb the depths of what it means, as Faulkner wrote, to “tell about the South.” But it is distinguis­hed by a division into helpful categories — “Becoming a Writer”; “Place, Politics, People”; “Writing About Race” — and the presence of diverse voices, from sage elders like Clyde Edgerton and Lee Smith to rising stars like Julie Cantrell, M.O. Walsh and Michael Farris Smith.

Humor always plays well in writing about writing; the collection kicks off with an equally witty and soulful piece by Oxford, Mississipp­i, journalist, author and raconteur Jim Dees, host of “Thacker Mountain Radio Hour” and a close friend of departed legends Willie Morris, Barry Hannah and Larry Brown, among many others. “If you subtract Mississipp­i from American arts and letters, you’d still have hip-hop and Stephen King, but America’s canon of arts would be much poorer,” Dees writes. “Who wants to live in a world without Elvis?”

Memphis native and Thurber Prizewinni­ng humorist Harrison Scott Key explores the challenge of writing a memoir with similar aplomb: “How do I map the expression­ist strangenes­s of my inner life in a way that invites others to sit in the cockpit of my soul and soar through the atmosphere of me, which is the only me I’ve ever been and the only unique thing I possess anyway? And the answer: I don’t know. It’s hard. And the other answer: Get over it.”

Another distinguis­hing aspect of “Southern Writers on Writing” is a more than usually direct accounting of the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow in shaping the Southern canon and deferring the dreams of African-American writers whose voices have only recently begun to be acknowledg­ed and still fight to be heard in a publishing climate historical­ly dominated by white men.

“I’m often asked why Mississipp­i’s civil-rights past plays such a large role in my work as a writer and editor, particular­ly when what I am writing is focused on the present,” writes W. Ralph Eubanks. “With respect to whether it was painful to revisit the past, I pointedly asked the questioner, ‘For whom is it painful?’ Is it more painful for me to remember the violence that erupted all around Mississipp­i — violence directed at people of color like me — or is it more painful for those who listen to me tell these stories to be reminded of those who did little to stop those senseless and brutal acts?” This and other accounting­s of the dark side of Southern history make “Southern Writers on Writing” as essential as it is entertaini­ng and insightful.

Of course, no accounting of Southern writing can spare us a fair share of sweet tea, bourbon, trees dripping with Spanish moss, and front-porch storytelli­ng under a full moon on a hot summer night, but the writers who populate this neat, nimble anthology are rarely lacking in self-awareness. Katherine Clark puts it best, describing the advice of a former professor: “’Please don’t turn into a profession­al southerner,’ he warned me. These are words to live by for anyone who aspires to be a Southern writer.”

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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