Chattanooga Times Free Press

Published novel is classic William Gay

New posthumous­ly published novel is classic William Gay

- BY CLAY RISEN CHAPTER16.ORG

“THE LOST COUNTRY” by William Gay (Dzanc Books, 368 pages, $27).

The saddest story novelist William Gay ever told didn’t appear in one of his books.

In a 2009 interview for Chapter 16, I asked him what the people around his hometown of Hohenwald, Tennessee, thought about his literary success. Gay was a self-taught writer; he didn’t go to college and spent most of his life painting houses and hanging drywall.

Soon after his first story appeared, in The Georgia Review in 1998, a neighbor asked him who was helping him write. “What do you mean by that?” he asked. “And she said, ‘Well, I knew your family a long time, and they’re not that smart. I knew you when you were younger, and you’re not that smart. I was wondering if you had somebody who took out the little words and put in the big words.’”

The story zeroes in on the necessary tragedy of Gay’s work, which he set almost exclusivel­y in 1950s Middle Tennessee. There are writers who can capture the mood of a place from the comforts of Austin or Berkeley or Oxford.

But Gay’s writing doesn’t capture Middle Tennessee; it is Middle Tennessee, as much a part of the landscape as its fields and barns and creeks. Every turn of phrase, every scene describes with effortless perfection the curve of a hill, the angle of an eave, the lilt in a drawl.

Unfortunat­ely, Gay felt, rural Tennessee was never what one would call a literary-minded place. At least the woman in Gay’s story took notice of his work. Most of the time, he told me, people didn’t seem to care one way or another. As his fame grew, he took to living for stretches in Oxford, Mississipp­i, or at various writers colonies. But he never stayed away too long; his home was also his creative life source. And that’s the tragedy: To be William Gay, he had to live in a world that didn’t appreciate William Gay.

The irony is that untold thousands of fans outside Hohenwald did appreciate William Gay, which brings us to his latest posthumous book, “The Lost Country.” After his death in 2012, rumors circulated about several “lost” manuscript­s in various states of completion. The first, “Little Sister Death,” appeared in 2015. It is obviously incomplete; it ends abruptly. The status of “The Lost Country,” the new novel, is less definitive. It seems complete, with a clear beginning, middle and end. But where the structure and pacing of “Little Sister Death” are tight and compelling right up to the last cutoff word, this new novel is uneven, with a structure and pacing that feel unbalanced.

Gay died suddenly, without a will, and it’s impossible to know whether this was meant to be the novel’s final draft or whether it’s some intermedia­ry version of a book that Gay intended to publish someday. Some characters are fully fleshed out, only to disappear in the text; others, who end up with major roles toward the end, are thinner than paper. These are not mistakes William Gay would make.

What makes “The Lost Country” worth reading is Gay’s descriptiv­e mastery, more mature and on fuller display here than even his best, earlier efforts. Moths “gutter” in a kerosene lamp; a character recalls the “wetanimal smell” of his father’s hat.

At the center of the story is Billy Edgewater, a recently discharged Naval enlistee traveling from the West Coast to East Tennessee, where his father lies dying. Edgewater is a quiet, basically decent man with “innocent, luminous eyes” who brings misfortune to most of the people who cross his path. We first meet him in Memphis, where he helps a female cop retrieve a motorcycle left to her in a will; a few hours later she has to sell it to pay his bail after he gets into a bar fight. Hitchhikin­g, he takes up with an amiable con artist named Roosterfis­h. After a close brush with death splits them up, Edgewater lands with another likable lout, Bradshaw, who brings him back to his parents and sister in Ackerman’s Field — a fictional town that recurs in Gay’s fiction, not unlike William Faulkner’s Yoknapataw­pha County. Edgewater falls in with Bradshaw’s sister, and out with the town bully, and the tensions among those three give the book a late-chapter narrative boost.

Edgewater’s journey is at once quixotic and driven — it’s never quite clear by what, nor is he the most reliable of narrators. There are hints of great pain in his past, of wrongs committed by him and against him. But his real hunger is internal. Like “an acolyte to some obscure and aberrant offshoot of Buddhism,” he seeks a life unburdened by the outside world. “This moment is all there is,” he says near the end of the book. “What I have in this moment, like the very moment, is all there is.” Only then can he release himself from being a burden on others, and himself, and feel free.

I read every word of “The Lost Country” with hunger — Gay is the sort of writer who could make tax forms exciting — but none more than those last several pages. As a resolution to Edgewater’s existentia­l predicamen­t, his hillbilly nirvana may be a bit of a copout. But I went back over those pages several times, looking for meaning beyond their confines. Are they also a clue to what Gay himself was after? Through his writing, his burrowing into himself and his surroundin­gs, might he also have been looking for a similar release from it all?

To read an uncut version of this review — and more local book coverage — visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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 ?? PHOTO FROM CHAPTER16.ORG ?? William Gay
PHOTO FROM CHAPTER16.ORG William Gay
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