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Journeyman (Brown Thrasher Books) [Paperback]

Erskine Caldwell (Author), Edwin T. Arnold (Foreword)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 1, 1996 Brown Thrasher Books
Written immediately following Tobacco Road and God's Little Acre, this novel introduces one of Erskine Caldwell's most memorable characters: the philandering, murderous itinerant preacher, Semon Dye. Part allegory, part tall tale, and with a good measure of old frontier humor, Journeyman,/i> tells of a stranger, as devilish as he is divine, who mysteriously arrives in Rocky Comfort, Georgia, and, inside of a week, nearly tears the small community apart.

Helping Rocky Comfort's citizens to rationalize their vices and weaknesses, Semon Dye then uses their flaws to his own advantage. Offering no forgiveness for their actions and no justification for his own, he confronts the people of Rocky Comfort with their own sins as he gambles, drinks, carouses, and fights along with them.

Culminating in a tumultuous, ecstatic revival, Journeyman is filled with insights into human nature and the physical and emotional components of religious fervor. This volume reprints the complete text of Journeyman as it was first published, before the more widely circulated edition, expurgated in the aftermath of the legal battles waged against God's Little Acre, was released.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Perhaps we're like New Yorkers who have never seen the Statue of Liberty—we forget the genius in our own backyard. Erskine Caldwell is one. . . . No one more richly deserves a critical renaissance than this writer, whose laser eye and balanced wit bring life to his work."--Southern Living

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.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 216 pages
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press (August 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0820318485
  • ISBN-13: 978-0820318486
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,691,904 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Typical Caldwell, September 14, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Journeyman (Brown Thrasher Books) (Paperback)
A traveling preacher comes to spend the week at a small southern farmer's house. He isn't what he seems to be as all hell breaks loose. The preacher has more vices than a mob boss; including gambling, pimping, and seducing folks's wives. This was one of Caldwell's first books.

Caldwell makes fun of the traveling preacher and people's gullability of them. He also makes fun of the revival meetings in which people go into trances and contortions after having "demons" expelled from them. Racy and certainly funny this book is a quick read, which emphasizes the point that if someone in authority tells you it is okay to do something, it is not always right just because they said so.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Storming Heaven By Force Of Lung, December 9, 2002
This review is from: Journeyman (Brown Thrasher Books) (Paperback)
Written with difficulty and poorly received by critics upon release in 1938, Journeyman directly followed Caldwell's two successful masterpieces, Tobacco Road and God's Little Acre. While less overtly funny than Tobacco Road and less touching than God's Little Acre, Journeyman remains a small, tightly controlled masterpiece well in keeping with its more famous predecessors, and is no more shocking than either.

A stranger arrives in the hot, sleepy, Georgia agricultural community of Rocky Comfort, driving up to Clay Horey's farm in a dying automobile, the sound of grinding gears and a cloud of billowing black smoke announcing his arrival. Clay, as easily molded and manipulated as his name suggests, isn't sure whether he sees a man emerging from the car or not, and briefly believes he's hallucinating. Buzzards are "soaring motionless overhead," and bluejays sweep from the woods in a flurry "as if they've discovered a snake in a tree." For a moment, the natural laws of the physical world have been suspended and oddly skewed. Clay's visitor is preacher Semon Dye (Semon / Die = Life / Death?), an apparently down on his luck wayfarer in dirty black clothing and a face charred brown from the smoke. Through the use of blatant but extremely effective and smartly executed symbolism, Caldwell makes it quite clear what sort of spiritual being Semon Dye is. He tells Clay he "feels horny," and intimidates Clay into action by jabbing at him repeatedly with a pitchfork. Readers will quickly notice that Semon is the prototype of Harry Powell, the preacher played by Robert Mitchum in the 1955 film Night Of The Hunter.

Semon, "about 50" and nothing less than 6 feet 8 inches tall, is also a magnetically sexual predator and personality, using his continuously evident "huge stiff thumb" to stab Clay between the ribs (a metaphorical act of 'sticking it to him,' as he soon will), and attracting women "like flocks of sheep." "He's the potentest thing," says 15 year old child bride Dene more than once, to Clay's chagrin. Semon sets about seducing everyone he meets literally or figuratively, quietly taking over gullible, torpid Clay's farm and life one piece at a time. Even when one male character says he'd "like to blow Semon's brains out," he also admits momentarily that he misses Dye's presence and being "tickled" by both his big stiff thumb and company. One woman, though just violently pistol whipped into unconsciousness by the preacher, nonetheless agrees to travel with him the following week.

But Rocky Comfort is already in a fallen state before Semon arrives. The only local church has been converted into a guano shed; Clay is married to current wife and teenager Dene, but hasn't divorced his previous and fourth wife, Lorene Horey, who appears in town uninvited and who literally acts out her surname by settling happily down to a life of prostitution; Clay's only child, uncontrollable 6 year old Vearl, is living with a syphilis infection he inexplicably contracted in his fourth year; Lorene, one of the stronger personalities in the book, constantly harasses Clay or Susan to take her son Vearl to a doctor for treatment, but doesn't lift a finger to do so herself; and Clay, though he's had a bottle of medicine for the boy for two years, has yet to give Vearl even a spoonful.


In an original, hilarious, and daring scene, Caldwell has Clay, Semon, and neighbor Tom lightly fighting over and becoming addicted to peeping through a "slit" in the back wall of Tom's cowshed at the barbed wire fence and beautiful, lush woodland stretching beyond it. This slit "the ... little slit I ever saw in all my life," Tom calls it presents an opportunity for the characters not only to peer directly into nature's sprawling, all encompassing vulva, but to simultaneously glimpse through it the only pure, untouchable, incorruptible world they'll ever know that which exists forever beyond the 'barbed wire fence' of their own animal state of lust and gross stupidity. Passing a neighborly jug of 'corn,' the three briefly fall into a state of peace and understanding with one another. Even while competing and tricking one another for access to the hole, they spontaneously empathize with each other's need to peer through it again and again. The unfallen, Eden like natural world they see on the other side but which is directly perceivable only through the magic slit is a vision of paradise that briefly unites them. Thus the male gaze meets nature's maw at eye level with happy results for all.

When Semon clamorously preaches to the community in the local school house at night, his true nature manifests again not only in his rage but in the sudden appearance of the black flies, June bugs, mud daubers, wasps and biting red ants that swarm into the building. Ostensibly attempting to raise the population spiritually by forcing them to admit and reject their sins and torrid natures, Semon finally reduces the assembly by torchlight to sweating, barely clothed, hysterically orgasmic serpents, slithering on their stomachs, speaking gibberish, and twining themselves around one another and around the desks meant for presumably innocent school children. Only prostitute and sexual sophisticate Lorene "the biggest sinner" in Semon's eyes consciously rejects the preacher's spell, sitting in the back of the room in horrified, disgusted, but unconverted astonishment.

Journeyman appears to be about man's casual indifference to grasping and preventing the pitfalls of cause and effect, and about his inability to learn the lesson of even his most frightful, painful, and harrowing experiences. Its 'religious' theme was taken too literally at the time of its initial publication; today's readers should beware of making the same mistake especially because Semon is only a self appointed and ostensible man of God and remember to keep in mind the book's period context. Caldwell's material here, however, remains timeless, and none of the struggle he had in the writing of the book is apparent. Seamless like the best of his work, Journeyman is a pleasurable page turner, coarse and wise by turns.

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4.0 out of 5 stars No Rest For the Wicked: Hypocrisy and Evangelism, November 15, 2007
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This review is from: Journeyman (Brown Thrasher Books) (Paperback)
What did Ozzy say, "I'm looking for a Miracle Man that tells me no lies/ I'm looking for a Miracle Man who's not in disguise?" Ozzy was of course discussing Jimmy Swaggart's "I Have Sinned" speech. Swaggart and Jim Bakker both gave a black eye to the Pentecostal evangelism in the 1980's. Yet, fifty years before their transgressions Erskine Caldwell painted a picture of evangelist hypocrisy. Semon Dye, the itinerant lay preacher in "Journeyman," makes Swaggart and Bakker seem like Saint Francis Assisi and Mother Theresa; Dye is a racist, heavy-drinking gambler six days a week who preaches against sin on the seventh.

In what can be seen as the third part of Caldwell's allegory of the Depression-era south, "Journeyman" attacks what he sees as the problem of revivalist preaching. Caldwell - himself the son of a Calvinist minister - makes no effort to hide his disdain for these itinerant preachers who moved through out the South. He gives us an image that Public Enemy would later show, "On one side of the street there's a church/on the other side a liquor store/Both of them keeping us poor."

Dye befriends farmers Clay and Tom. Their favorite activity appears to be sitting in the dark drinking and looking at the world through only a small crack in the wall. This incomplete world is seen as better and safer then the real world for all three of the men. Clay's current wife sees Dye as exciting and worldly; while, Clay's ex-wife turned prostitute is the only one in Rocky Comfort that sees through Dye for what he is.

Written before Caldwell's trip to the Soviet Union - and eventual disillusionment thereof - the story drips with the warning of religion as the "opiate of the masses" and one of the things keeping the South poor and backward. "Journeyman" is the next step in his trilogy, as "Tobacco Road" points to the problems of share-cropping and "God's Little Acre" exposes the issues of maintaining old values in a new Capitalist South. "Journeyman" is a must for Caldwell fans; but, if you have not read any of his work read one of the other two first. Four Stars.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE mud-spattered rattle-trap of an automobile rolled off the road and came to a dead stop beside the magnolia tree. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
stiff thumb, corn whisky
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Semon Dye, Praise God, Tom Rhodes, Rocky Comfort, Lucy Nixon, Clay Horey, Ralph Stone, Miss Lorene, Good God Almighty, That's Dene, Where's Vearl
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