The Commercial Appeal

A woman of her time becomes a woman ahead of her time in ‘Amelia Thorn’

- Faye Jones

Memphis writer and editor Richard J. Alley takes readers on a tour of one photograph­er’s remarkable life, as well as the society of 20th-century Memphis and Mississipp­i, in his second novel, “Amelia Thorn.”

Alley structures the book around Amelia’s photograph­s, which serve as markers of her life, ranging from her first photograph of her father to a final image of a slightly confused woman in late middle age. Each picture leads to a memory, and memories are what Amelia shares with an interviewe­r as a prelude to an exhibition of her photograph­s in a Memphis gallery.

Amelia begins her story with her wedding day during World War II. Her fiancé, Edward, is leaving to serve in the South Pacific, and like many young soldiers he wants to marry before he goes, to give him something to live for. Their plan is to leave Mississipp­i, marry in Memphis, and then go on to San Diego, where Amelia will have the support of other military wives. But while at breakfast in a small café before their wedding, the bag with all their money is stolen. The kindness of the café owner and his family touches Amelia deeply, as does the city itself. She realizes that she can’t travel with her husband to California but will wait for him in Memphis. Later, despite her world travels, Memphis becomes her touchstone.

Amelia lives many lives in her time. She’s born a privileged daughter in small-town Mississipp­i and then becomes part of the working class in Memphis. For a period of time, she steps outside of society altogether. Finally, a fateful meeting with a woman photograph­er shows her a different way to live: as an independen­t career woman.

Chance and timing play major roles in “Amelia Thorn”: Two daughters of the same father have different lives due to the color of their skin. A pilot suffers a heart attack right before takeoff instead of in the air. A trip home comes a

‘Amelia Thorn’

few minutes too late to say goodbye.

As in his 2015 novel, “Five Night Stand,” Alley’s writing here is clear and filled with memorable detail. His characters are complex, and he reminds readers that even the most unlikable have backstorie­s that don’t excuse their actions but may help to explain them. Amelia’s harsh, strict grandmothe­r, for example, is married at 16 to a much older Civil War veteran, a marriage that combined the “two largest land-owning families in Mississipp­i.” Her job is to provide an heir.

The child of that union, Amelia’s father, spends his life wishing he were somewhere else, doing something else, with someone else. It is not until the next generation, with Amelia, that the chains of the past are stretched, if not fully broken.

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

By Richard J. Alley. Beacon Press. 432 pages. $19.99.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Alley
Alley

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States