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The New Austerities [Hardcover]

Tito Perdue (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 1994
Come along on a bizarrely entertaining journey deep into the rotting soul of America. Lee Pefley, a man who make misanthopy look benevolent, decides to flee the decay and drudgery of New York city for his childhood Alabama. Accompanied by his beloved wife Judy ("short and possibly getting shorter"), $19,000 in hundred-dollar bills, a supply of pilfered library books, and a pistol, Lee sets out on a bleakly hilarious tour of the easter nstates. A passionate lover of classical literature, an incurable kleptomaniac, an overwrought paranoid, and a hopeless insomniac, Lee looks at the world through uniquely hallucinatory, and definitely not rose-colored, glasses. The view is spectacularly original.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Bored, 50-ish Wall Street insurance man Leland Pefley, nicknamed Lee, is a lover of Mahler and Wagner, a compulsive stealer of library books, a connoisseur of ancient Greece and a gun-toting, hard-drinking paranoiac. Protagonist of Perdue's debut novel Lee (1981), which portrayed him as a septuagenarian, misanthropic Lee, in this edgy prequel, hates big cities, career women, television, pop music and other signs of decadent Western civilization. With his charmingly eccentric wife Judy, Lee flees New York for his native Alabama. Their adventures en route involve a farmers' wedding in the woods and a mystic automobile repairman who recounts near-death experiences. Moving into a decrepit old house that he inherited, Lee attends a family reunion and learns to sympathize with ordinary people, though he is dismayed by a New South full of video stores and group-therapy workshops. At bottom a reactionary snob, Lee voices a howl of protest against regimented and standardized modern existence, sentiments with which discriminating readers may find themselves in accord. His relentlessly bleak vision is never lugubrious, however, due to Perdue's magically evocative descriptive powers, pungent wit and iconoclastic point of view. Those who read Lee will find this look at the hero's earlier life especially poignant.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Perdue's second novel focuses on the same characters as his first but is set a few years earlier. Book thief, insomniac, heavy drinker, and curmudgeon Leland ("Lee") Pefley is a transplanted Alabaman living in the northern reaches of Manhattan with his diminutive wife, Judy, and working in the southernmost ones as a word-processor. Despising contemporary urban life and its denizens, he spends most of his energy on reading the Greeks, listening to classical music, and drinking. At wit's end, the couple decides to move to Lee's ancestral home in Alabama. Their trip becomes a comic roller-coaster ride in a midnight-blue Volvo whose top speed is 40 miles an hour. They arrive down South, where Lee proceeds to make a fool of himself looking for people he knew decades before and Judy accepts everything with equanimity. Lee's family, an odd assortment of hillbillies (although even here, one of them tinkers with a modem as the others fish in a putrid water hole) presided over by non compis mentis Lulu, immediately take him to be an IRS agent. Full of neurotic energy, kooks, eccentrics, weirdos, and intellectuals, this novel will appeal to readers whose interest is in a good laugh and general amazement at Perdue's creations.
Harold Augenbraum, Mercantile Lib., New York
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 218 pages
  • Publisher: Peachtree Publishers (August 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1561450863
  • ISBN-13: 978-1561450862
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.3 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,886,749 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Tito Perdue was born in 1938 in Chile, South America where his father, an Alabama native, was employed as an electrical engineer with the Braden Copper Company. Returning to the United States in 1941, his family settled in Anniston, Alabama, remaining there until his father's employer relocated to St. Louis in 1955. In 1956 Tito graduated from Indian Springs School, a private academy located south of Birmingham, and was admitted to Antioch College in Ohio, an institution from which he was expelled in 1957 for having cohabited off-campus with the former Judy Clark, also an Antioch student. They were married later that year, both at age 18, and are together still. This year at college is the subject of The Sweet-Scented Manuscript, published in 2004 by Baskerville Publishers.

Tito attended the University of Texas in 1957-59 and 1960-61, receiving the B.A. at the end of that period. His daughter Melanie was born in January 1959, in Austin, Texas. During 1959-60, he worked as an assistant bookkeeper in the financial district of New York City. He returned to New York after graduation from the University of Texas and was employed for one year as an insurance underwriter, an experience lovingly described in his novel The New Austerities published in 1994 to very good reviews.

Tito was employed by the University of Iowa Libraries in 1968-70, and then began work as The Social Sciences Bibliographer at Iowa State University, a position held for ten years ending in 1980. He then became Assistant Director of the State University of New York at Binghamton Library and left in 1982 to become Associate Director of Emory University Library. He was discharged from that position in early 1983 as a result of policy disagreements and opted to devote himself full-time thereafter to novel writing.

In 1991 Tito's first published novel Lee was issued by Four Walls Eight Windows, a small press in New York City. The book received favorable reviews in The New York Times and elsewhere, being declared "spellbinding" by The New England Review of Books and "a stunning debut" by The Los Angeles Reader. Among negative reviews, Publishers' Weekly exposed the book as the work of a reactionary snob and revealed that "it sinks under the weight of its own pretensions."

In 1994 his somewhat experimental Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture was published, a story based upon the history of his forebears on his mother's side. Extremely favorable and extended reviews were provided by Thomas Fleming, editor of Chronicles; a Magazine of American Culture, and by columnist Jim Knipfel of The New York Press. In 2007 a paperback edition of Lee was issued by Overlook Press. Tito's most recent novel, Fields of Asphodel also appeared in 2007 from the same publisher.
Tito determined to become a writer as a result of having read the novels of Thomas Wolfe when he was an adolescent. Since that time he has been writing, or preparing to write (or resuscitating), for a period of about fifty years.

Depending upon the weather and the day of the week, Tito admires Orwell, Faulkner, Dostoevsky, Hardy and the nearly-forgotten Ladislas Reymont. Among current American authors, he prefers Larry Brown, William Gay, and Wendell Berry. Tito's taste in music runs to Wagner and Mahler.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Seriously funny!, April 9, 2002
By 
This review is from: The New Austerities (Hardcover)
Some critics have compared Perdue's work to John Kennedy Toole's A CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES. His protagonist, Lee Pefley, is what Jay Nock called a "superfluous man" -- a man of classical learning doomed to live in a world whose movers and shakers never read anything more substantial than how-to books like "The Tao of Management."

A "prequel" to his debut novel, LEE, this witty novel opens with the protagonist contemplating the futile misery of his existence in Dinkins-era New York, where he is employed at an insurance firm. He has finally had enough. Lee has enough money in his retirement and savings accounts to live -- if only he can get out of New York. In a hilarious scene, he tells his boss to shove it, then he and his wife literally break out of the city -- busting through a tollgate in their aging car. Pefley is Alabama-bound, where he tries to re-discover the Agrarian world of his ancestors.

There is a "postmodern" quality to Perdue's style, but a closer reading reveals that his underlying perspective is PRE-modern. Lee Pefley is a quixotic reactionary, seeking to return to a culture of traditional, localized loyalties.

This is a thoughtful, complex novel.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars must read for any southerner with finer than ny sensibilities, April 19, 2011
This review is from: The New Austerities (Hardcover)
the title above said it all. Southerners ---always great writers--- are still writing but just not published. The internet is changing that. Suppressed voices are coming forward, more interesting, more analytical, with more density and sophistication, in English with a larger vocabulary than the urban t.v. ticker lines. This man documents, as so many others, the underground voices of americans shut out after the civil war, and again in the 60s, and the voices are fresh, not something one has heard before. A guy who knows his Faulkner, and cares about language.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Highly original book, December 4, 2007
This review is from: The New Austerities (Hardcover)
The time inevitably comes when anyone who finds himself lodged unwillingly in New York City will wish to flee the place and seek sanctuary in more hospitable realms. For the hero of this book those realms lie deep within the boundaries of Alabama, specifically on the some 200 acres that have come down to him by inheritance. Having put aside a small fund of money and a tiny wife who seems prepared for any adventure, these two people point their superannuated Volvo in a southerly direction and set out on one of the most variagated and problematic journeys in print.
Alabama, certain features notwithstanding, turns out to be so far superior to his recent experience in the big city that he opts to stay. How he manages to do so, and why, form the thesis of this highly original book.Lee,The Sweet-Scented Manuscript,Fields of Asphodel
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