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Country Churchyards
 
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Country Churchyards [Hardcover]

Eudora Welty (Author), Elizabeth Spencer (Introduction)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 25, 2000

A great writer's poignant photographs of Mississippi graveyards and memorial stones

For many years Eudora Welty wished to produce a book about country churchyards. Published at long last, in her ninety-first year, this book includes ninety of her photographs along with a conversation in which Welty shares her impressions and her memories of the 1930s and 1940s when she rambled through Mississippi cemeteries taking pictures. She recalls poignant and sometimes chilling experiences that occurred.

"I took a lot of cemetery pictures in my life," she said. "For me cemeteries had a sinister appeal somehow." Her camera eye focused on distinctive funerary emblems, statuary, storied urns, and appealing folklife qualities expressed in the gravestones. Just as many pieces of Welty's fiction feature lyrical descriptions of cemeteries and graves in a way that is expressly Weltian, so too do these photographs taken in the cool, sequestered churchyards and graveyards of Jackson, Port Gibson, Churchill, Rodney, Utica, Crystal Springs, Vicksburg, Rocky Springs, and sites near the old Natchez Trace.

They not only document her rambles but also accent the images of regional cemeteries that appear in her stories and novels. This is her unique view of the southern graveyard and of its unusual artworks that arrested her attention -- chains, willows, baskets, angels, lambs, pointing hands, doves, and wreaths. "I like the tombstones showing children asleep in seashells," she says. For her, an absorbed observer, there is charm in the stone motifs and in the sentimental modes of commemorating the dead.

As a contemplative loner she called no attention to herself as she wandered quietly through small-town cemeteries with her camera. Both the country settings and the heart-felt inscriptions on decaying marble heightened her imagination and triggered her creative impulses.

Accompanying the photographs are selected passages about graveyards and funerals from her fiction -- Losing Battles, The Golden Apples and Other Stories, A Curtain of Green and Other Stories, and The Optimist's Daughter -- and from her essay "Some Notes on River Country."

In the introduction Elizabeth Spencer, a Mississippi writer who has been a life-long friend of Welty's, explores the photographic images for the meanings they yield, for the light they throw onto Welty's fiction, and for her own memories of their home state's evocative graveyards and burial customs.

Eudora Welty, one of America's most acclaimed and honored writers, is the author of many novels and story collections, including The Optimist's Daughter (Pulitzer Prize), Losing Battles, The Ponder Heart, The Robber Bridegroom, and A Curtain of Green and Other Stories and two collections of her photographic work Photographs and One Time, One Place: Mississippi in the Depression (both from University Press of Mississippi).


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

The doyenne of southern letters has enjoyed an avocation in photography in addition to her vocation of writing. In fact, Welty worked for the WPA in the 1930s and 1940s, traveling around her native Mississippi, documenting the ways of life distinctive to that state. One of the "themes" of those photographs was country churchyards, and 90 of those particular images have now been gathered into this album. Welty's friend and fellow southern fiction writer Elizabeth Spencer supplies a beautiful introduction, in which she connects Welty's interests and sensibilities to what she observed and absorbed as she explored the cemeteries of rural Mississippi. "What seems to speak most plainly to me," Spencer relates, "is Eudora Welty's vision of death as a part of life." And the richly textured black-and-white photographs boldly but also enchantingly remind the viewer of that correlation. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

From the Inside Flap

Welty's poignant photographs of Mississippi graveyards and memorial stones paired with Spencer's exploration of the meanings the photographs yield and the light they shine onto Welty's fiction

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 111 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi (April 25, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1578062357
  • ISBN-13: 978-1578062355
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 8.3 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,028,873 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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45 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More photographs from a writer's eye, June 7, 2000
This review is from: Country Churchyards (Hardcover)
Those who cherish Eudora Welty's earlier collection of photographs (_One Time, One Place_) need no urging from me to sample this new jewel box of images from a Mississippi past. Like the earlier collection, these black-and-white photographs document the rural South of the 1930's and 1940's when Welty worked as a photographer for the WPA. As its title suggests, this book offers a tighter focus: on the burying-places of the rich and poor, the black and the white. Here be angels of all sorts, urns and chapels, sheep and dogs, children who seem but to sleep in masks of marble. Those who know Welty's keen gift for description will see how her eye for detail, setting and atmosphere was trained up in her early photographic work. Each image seems surrounded by the rich and generous spirit through which Welty sees the world and those who toil in it.

The photographs are preceded by an account of a conversation with Miss Welty (as we Southern men and women of letters have learned to always refer to her) and interspersed with excerpts from the novels. Also a joy is the introduction by fellow Mississipian Elizabeth Spencer, who places these images in the landscape of Welty's fiction, as expressions of "Eudora Welty's vision of death as a part of life." Spencer continues, "It must find its ceremony within family and community, and its symbols, beautifully displayed here, arise out of the beliefs and feelings of shared love."

To spend time with this book is to walk among the mossy trees, rest among the cool white monuments, and feel the pull of that greater community which surrounds us. It gives further evidence why Miss Welty is one of our great national treasures. But I leave the last word to her, in this excerpt from _The Optimist's Daughter_: "The top of the hill ahead was crowded with winged angels and life-sized effigies of bygone citizens in old-fashioned dress, standing as if by count among the columns and shafts and conifers like a familiar set of passengers collected on deck of a ship, on which they all knew each other -- bona-fide members of a small local excursion, embarked on a voyage that is always returning in dreams."

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars LOVE THIS BOOK!, May 21, 2001
This review is from: Country Churchyards (Hardcover)
Did I say I love this book enough? <G> Eudora Welty, the great Mississippi writer took these photographs many years ago. They cover churches and cemeteries around the Jackson area. Some of these places I know and have in my own collection of photos. Haunting places. There is much to be said of Welty's work with the camera. She has a great eye for detail, for light, and for mood. She has captured a period that is long gone. She loves angels. There are few commentaries because this is a book, not about words, but about churches, tombstones, and their lasting message. A great addition to both collectors of tombstone art and Eudora Welty's work. A classic. Buy it while you can. It will be a collectible one day.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Trading on Her Name, March 17, 2006
This review is from: Country Churchyards (Hardcover)
I obviously am coming late to this book. I've been a fan of Miss Welty's writing since growing up in the sixties. I actually wrote her a fan letter and got a reply and like a stupid child, didn't keep it.

I also own Miss Welty's other photo books. As a photo bug of forty years, I enjoyed her other work during the Depression, though it certainly was not special in itself. It is worth more as a historical record.

Upon buying this book I was surprised that it made it to publication. I have shot hundreds of the same type of photos traveling through small towns myself. These photos remain as did her earlier photographic work--snapshots of a time and a place. There's nothing wrong with snapshots, but I them for what they are: a historical record. Others have done much better work on cemeteries and gravestones.

I'm confident that, without Miss Welty's name, this book would never have reached publication.
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