By C. Hope Clark
The reviews of Go Set a Watchman have been all over the place, a lot of them tinged by
the fact Harper Lee is elderly, in assisted living, and possibly not 100
percent aware of her new notoriety. But I just want to look at the book, the
writing, and its effect on me.
I – Loved - It
I am a child of the deep
South. Born in Mississippi. Reared in Mississippi then South Carolina. My
parents are Southern. My grandparents, great-grandparents, and however many
greats were Southern back to the late 17th century. My mother
grew up the sixth of six kids in rural Mississippi on a cotton farm. As a small
child visiting the farm in the summer, I recall begging for a cotton sack so I
could go out with the hands in the field to pick my grandfather's cotton. My
grandmother sewed a miniature floral sack that fit over my shoulder, a version
of the white ones the adults used. It didn’t take me long to understand the
hard work and the work ethic of those workers. I remember admiring them for
being so grownup and efficient, yet a tad distraught about watching them sweat
once I gave up the effort and sat in the shade.
I had a sweet aunt who
lived in Jackson, Mississippi who could've stepped into a character in the book The Help. She employed a lovely lady who worked for her for decades, in a
white uniform. As a child I looked up to her as someone who ran the house and
understood what any child needed. We won't get into the pros and cons of that
arrangement.
I recall aging a few
more years and feeling like Jean Louise does in Go Set a Watchman.
My generation was remarkably more modern than the previous one and the one
before that, and I recall the differing schools of thought regarding race just
as is presented in this book. Some of the beautiful people in my life had
quasi-racial views that I recall labeling as outdated, and I recall feeling in
my heart that I was glad my generation would move this issue forward to new
ground. But after a hard look at my family history I realized that each
generation handled that subject differently, with each one advancing a step or
two as the culture of the time allowed. Mine wasn’t the only generation
trying to be progressive. Mine didn’t get it all right either.
And this is what makes
for remarkable writing . . . chapters that make our own experiences blend in
with the fiction until we can hardly tell the difference.
The opening of Watchman wasn’t
anything to be excited about if you listen to the how-to gurus of today.
Chapters One and Two did little more than establish the time, setting and
introduce us to the characters. The disadvantage that Watchman had
to overcome, which was not what Harper Lee could ever foresee, was the reader
having a preconceived impression about Scout/Jean Louise and Atticus. However,
I’d never read To Kill a Mockingbird. I’m reading it now, but I’m
glad I read Watchman without any preconceived notions as to
how the characters ought to behave. But while the opening wasn’t dramatic, it
caught the reader. No word was wasted. Each word mattered. Each sentence built
precisely on the one before until we realized we were two chapters in, eager to
see where this story went because if the writing was so beautiful with nothing
happening, how fantastic would this be when the plot hits the fan?
I’m a dialogue fanatic.
Striking dialogue rocks because conversation inserts energy into the players
who in turn define the story or plot. In the case of Watchman,
dialogue also meant internal monologue, or Jean Louise’s thoughts. We were her.
We got angry. We felt the pain in our heart at her disappointment in humanity
in her beloved hometown. We felt the conflict of home versus New York, how one
didn’t understand the other yet she could not one-hundred percent side with
either.
I’m also a strong
believer in setting as character. Again, as a child of the South, I’m always on
the lookout for the frauds who feign Southern. It’s difficult to write about a
region you do not intimately know. But I smelled the biscuits, tasted the
too-strong coffee, and choked at the overdone perfume clinging to hair and hats
at the coffee clutch. The old-fashioned furniture, the cool water during an
evening dip in the lake, cigarette smoke during a time when lighting up was as
second nature as tucking hair behind an ear.
Detail after detail.
This story was not complicated . . . simple actually. A girl comes home to be
disappointed in the experience – the painful changes that occurred atop the
ignorant struggle to remain the same. All done with elementary word usage. Deep
character, deft strokes of setting, and dialogue to make you almost look up and
hunt for the voices. A combination that stirs us into anger or tears, just
because we read a page in a book.
Harper Lee wrote this
book so intensely as to make people of today uncomfortable. I’m actually
happier that she released it now, when its message is being felt differently
that it would have been if published during the period To Kill a Mockingbird hit the bookstores. She snared the time period, more
colorful when read today than back then. The political arguments were intense
and honest. The coffee clutch party was pretentious and stifling, accented by a
huge degree of internal monologue that I’d be afraid to use, that Harper Lee
used with relish. Loved the aunt's old-fashioned ways of corsets, dresses, and
hats in public compared to Jean Louise's slacks and cigarettes – the contrasts
subtle when presented, but loud in a big picture way.
And I adored the ending.
No, Atticus was not
painted a racist like some profess, but should be considered more of a realist.
To me, he was no different than what I’ve read thus far in To Kill a Mockingbird. He was part of change, but recognized it as a difficult and
complicated changing of the guard. Change is painful and is never handled with
a clean break regardless of what people want, and he chose to remain in the
middle of it to better understand and help with the transition. Sitting across
the table from a racist did not make him one. Yet the ending rousted readers to
challenge their beliefs, quite evident from the reviews on Amazon, and across
the blogosphere. As an author, that would just make me quiver with
satisfaction.
This book is so real
about humanity and change that it stings, yet the words are delicately chosen,
the prose stunning. The book’s earned a place on my top shelf of books,
alongside Prince of Tides, The Stand, Lord of the Rings, The Paris Wife, and The Lewis Man. It's so refreshing to read
something that doesn't fight so hard to be PC.
Now I'm reading To Kill a Mockingbird. I wish Miss Lee had written more. Lee speaks of a
subject we're afraid to talk about without yelling and picking a fight, and she
enables us to slow down and study it with a more level head because that raw
part of our culture took place a long, long time ago. There has to be some
omniscient hand in Watchman not being found for decades, as if we needed the
discussion now more than ever.
Go Set a Watchman is beautiful literature with a serious
message, showing us how life isn’t simple, isn’t perfect, and isn’t readily
fixed when broken. But it’s best to remain in that world, amongst its flawed
and struggling people, in order to make it better. In other words, I wish I
were still in that story. That’s the epitome of great writing.
____________________________________________________________________
C. Hope Clark writes mysteries set in
humid, beautiful South Carolina. She adores setting as character and
colorful Southern players, and she continues those strongest traits of her
writing in her new release, Edisto Jinx, the second in The Edisto Island Mysteries, released October 1 from Bell Bridge Books. Learn more about Hope at www.chopeclark.com and
about her mission to assist writers atwww.fundsforwriters.com . The Carolina Slade Mysteries, Bell Bridge Books and The Edisto Island Mysteries, Bell Bridge Books
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