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Georgia Boy [Paperback]

Erskine Caldwell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Paperback, February 1, 1971 --  

Book Description

February 1, 1971
In this appealing collection of fourteen interrelated stories, twelve-year-old William Stroup recounts the ludicrous predicaments and often self-imposed hardships his family endures. Playing on the tension between Martha, his hardworking, sensible mother, and Morris, his disarmingly likable but shiftless and philandering father, William tells of Pa's flirtation with a widow, his swapping match with a band of gypsies, his battle of wits with a traveling silk-tie saleswoman, and his get-rich-quick schemes based on selling Ma's old love letters and collecting scrap iron.

Often caught in the middle of the Stroups' bungles is Handsome Brown, their yard hand, as well as a number of animals with all-too-human qualities: Ida, the mule; Pretty Sooky, the runaway calf; College Boy, the fighting cock; a small flock of woodpeckers that favor Handsome's head over a tree; and goats who commandeer the roof of the Stroups' house.

Georgia Boy was a special book to Caldwell, and its humor is less in the service of social criticism than in other works in which he dealt with poor white southerners. Beneath Georgia Boy's folksy lightheartedness, however, lie the problems of indigence, racism, and apathy that Caldwell confronted again and again in his fiction.

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Georgia Boy might well have been subtitled Life with Father on the Tobacco Road. . . . This reviewer would have to go back to Huck Finn to find a more companionable storyteller than Pa Stroup's William."--New York Times Book Review


"Caldwell has a way of kicking a comic stiuation around until it turns into wild burlesque."--The New Yorker
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

About the Author

Erskine Caldwell (1903-1987) was born in Newnan, Georgia. He became one of America's most widely read, prolific, and critically debated writers, with a literary output of more than sixty titles. At the time of his death, Caldwell's books had sold eighty million copies worldwide in more than forty languages. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1984.
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Signet (February 1, 1971)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0451045319
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451045317
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Typical Caldwell, September 14, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Georgia Boy (Paperback)
This book is a novel / short story collection. The book involves a poor Georgia family: an ignorant but pleasure seeking husband, his nagging, hard-working wife, their young teen-age son, and their black workman ( who is treated as a thankless slave ).

Each chapter in the book, is not related to the previous, but are simply episodes of humor in ignorance. Their father's money making schemes are a stitch. Their are also some sobering stories as well, but mostly it is a funny book. I found myself really attached to the family at the end and enjoyed the book quite a bit. It is typical Caldwell writing here.

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Falling Out Over A Little Thing Like Kinship", May 20, 2003
This review is from: Georgia Boy (Paperback)
Equal parts burlesque, farce, and tall tale, Erskine Caldwell's interrelated short story collection Georgia Boy (1943) finds its author near the peak of his writing talent. Young William Stroup, the observant only child of a poor Georgia family, narrates the fourteen stories. While the endless string of shenanigans William reports clearly demonstrate his father Morris' stupidity, sloth, and immorality, objective William never offers an opinion on his father's behavior. As the stories progress, it becomes clear that while he mildly sympathizes with his hardworking, frustrated, and put-upon mother, William actually admires his father's outrageous breaches of acceptable behavior.

Like Jeeter Lester of Tobacco Road (1931) and Ty Ty Walden of God's Little Acre (1933) before him, Morris Stroup is a daydreamer constantly on the lookout for pie in the sky and any shortcut to prosperity, no matter how absurd, outlandish, or illegal.

In fact, the Stroups stand somewhere between the Lesters and the Waldens in terms of socialization; while they are not as backward, uneducated, and dispossessed as the poorest-of-the-poor-Lesters, the Stroups lack the Walden's daring-do, ingenuity, marginal prosperity, and relatively strong interrelationships. Like the Lesters, the Stroups live in a house divided: since the extraverted Morris is constantly misbehaving on a grand scale, William's mother ("Ma") finds it necessary to constantly be on her guard against her husband's latest transgression. One of the book's hilarious running jokes is Ma telling William to "go in the house right this instant and shut the doors and pull down the window shades" so she can confront Morris alone with his latest deception, chase him with a broom, or throw any object available in his direction. Like most men and teenage boys in Caldwell's fiction, Morris thinks with his genitals and his stomach first.

When Ma is not suffering due to Morris's behavior, Handsome Brown, the black "yard boy," is. Handsome lives in a shed on the Morris property and receives only food and occasional secondhand clothing for his work. Though Handsome is thrown from a second-story roof into a deep well, attacked for hours by a flock of woodpeckers, and hit repeatedly in the face with baseballs due to Morris's wild machinations, Handsome also shows far more common and moral sense than any other character in the book. Handsome, who has a slight lazy streak of his own, also does most of the work around the house, while Morris "hasn't done an honest day's work in ten years." While Morris is clearly a fool in every sense, Handsome is only a fool in Morris's unthinking opinion: Morris unquestioningly considers Handsome a lesser being strictly on the basis of his race.

But Morris is an archetypal fool extraordinaire, ridiculously bringing one avoidable disaster after another upon his head. A pure fool, Morris is incapable of learning from his mistakes or perceiving his own culpability, lacks foresight entirely, and regardless of the outcome of his actions, still manages to have a high opinion of himself as a `hail-fellow-well-met,' kind, light-hearted individual.

The stories of Georgia Boy abound with loaded, riotous situations, most of which have been precipitated by Morris. The Stroup home is invaded by caravans of marauding gypsies; the roof of their two-story house becomes home to a family of goats; Morris discovers that a young widow likes having her toes tickled with a chicken feather; Ma discovers her precious ribbon-bound love letters and the church's new hymnals have disappeared; Morris decides to become the town's dog catcher; Handsome decides to run off to work for the circus; Morris decides to purchase and bright yellow and green necktie he can't afford and has no use for; Morris decides his neighbors have less use for their own property than he does; Ma decides Morris's cock fighting days have to come to an end.

As in his other early fiction, Caldwell excels at characterization, even while his men, women, and children tend to run to type. Caldwell had a genius for comedy that stretches the boundaries of probability without ever going too far. Like a fourteen-story illustration of F. Scott Fitzgerald's statement that "there's no confusion like the confusion of a simple mind," Georgia Boy is a warm, touching, and uproarious examination of the large and small foibles of man.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Should have been either funnier or more dramatic, January 8, 2003
By 
This review is from: Georgia Boy (Paperback)
Readers who were struck by the bleakness and power of Caldwell's Tobacco Road will find something very different in these almost homey, amusing reminiscences of a seriously dysfunctional Southern family. The book is structured as a series of self-sufficient vignettes, detailing separate incidents in the everyday lives of these very everyday people in the early 20th century. The father, Morris Stroup, is lazy, thoughtless, possibly a womanizer (only the Grass Widow knows for sure), certainly a thief, frequently a drunk, and willing to turn his hand to anything except honest work. The mother, Martha, is appropriately harried, cantankerous, demanding, and dictatorial. She takes in wash to help make ends meet, but she bitterly resents the fact that she has to do so much hard work (that she considers beneath her) just to make up for her husband's shortcomings. So what's a boy to do, but just try to stay out of the way?

The stories are told from the viewpoint of young William, but he is rarely more than an observer. Handsome Brown, the `Negro yardboy', gets stuck doing the really dirty work, and gets pretty short shrift from both grownups, although he and William are great pals. He bears the brunt of most of the book's physical humor, and some enterprising student could probably write a good paper about racism (or just plain southern stereotypes) using this book. Despite the nostalgic, Wonder Years viewpoint, there's an undercurrent of pain and frustration that makes us sympathize with these characters even when we see them behaving pretty badly, as when Pa comes home drunk and starts breaking the furniture, or Ma's endlessly distressing over what the neighbors will think. Caldwell's picturesque prose paints some hilarious pictures - the goats on the roof, and the attack of the shirt-tail woodpeckers stick in the mind - but the actual belly-laughs are few and far between, and too often the characters come off as more pathetic than lovable. As a result, the pleasure one might derive from these slapstick antics is tempered by the misery and poverty that these luckless people seem doomed to live in. Fans of southern literature will find this book fairly light reading, however, since many American authors (Faulkner, Twain, Harper Lee, etc...) have dealt with the foibles, follies, pain and pathos of these kinds of characters far more effectively.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
THERE was a big commotion in front of the house, sounding as though somebody had dumped a load of rocks on our steps. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
baling machine, ridge plate, witch grass, red silk shirt
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Handsome Brown, Uncle Ned, Preacher Hawshaw, Morris Stroup, College Boy, Ben Simons, Miss Susie Thing, Ned Stroup, Briar Creek, Where's Handsome
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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