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Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture
 
 
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Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture [Hardcover]

Tito Perdue (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 1994
In volcanically active, post Civil War Alabama, a young man leaves his demented father's compound and seeks a job and a mate among fellow Alabamns who consider him genetically suspect.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The cynicism and drastic rejection of the modern that pervaded Perdue's Lee and The New Austerities are less evident in this lyrical but ironic novel, a haunting portrait of an Alabama farmer that begins in the 1870s and ends with his dying moments in 1936. Ben, the protagonist (and grandfather of the title hero of Lee), leaves his half-demented widower father, clerks in a dry goods store, keeps a hive of bees, works as a spelling teacher, goes whoring and then stumbles into marriage with a Betty, a land-rich woman. As a farmer struggling to feed six children, Ben takes a second job as a mailman, coping with robbers, drought, floods and debt, as well as with his independent-minded wife. In a strong, expressive, oddly musical style, Perdue magically evokes an Alabama of still smoldering volcanoes, red clay, windmills and ramshackle towns where horse-drawn buggies mingle with automobiles. Ben, whose gumption and misguided cleverness land him into misadventures, seems a Forrest Gump-like innocent at the novel's outset, but Perdue wryly charts his protagonist's growing maturity and breadth of vision.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Insomniac and nearly as delusional as his demented father, Benjamin Reuben hesitantly explores the immediate reaches of rural post-Civil War Alabama beyond the family's mule-cultivated farm. Considered the best of a bad lot, Ben and his eccentricities are viewed with great amusement by the locals through his careers as dry goods clerk, teacher, farmer, and mail carrier. Retaining several literary devices from his earlier novel Lee (LJ 9/15/91)-e.g., the main character's fixation on obscure books-Perdue paints his own picture of the South. Unfortunately, the story has little appeal. Though told from the perspective of a Southern idiot, it should not be compared to Faulkner's classic, The Sound and the Fury (1929). For Southern regional collections only.
Robert Jordan, Univ. of Iowa, Iowa City
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 222 pages
  • Publisher: Baskerville Publishers (October 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1880909243
  • ISBN-13: 978-1880909249
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,422,025 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.


 

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Beautiful Book!, August 10, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture (Hardcover)
Like the fiction of William Faulkner and Thomas Wolfe, the poetic prose is what makes Perdue's book a great work of southern literature. The language is so beautiful as to render the plot of secondary importance. In his previous novels, Mr. Perdue's main character was Lee. His grandfather, Ben is the hero of Opportunities. Trying to earn his way in the post Civil War era, Ben leaves the family farm and turns his ability to spell to account by gaining a teaching position and a wife with acres of farmland, and later, a government job. Perdue's talent is that he paints the nobility and humor in this uniquely southern character with sensitive and lush verbal coloration. A beautiful book - but very unlike his early novels
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Yes, the book is every bit as strange as its title., December 4, 2007
This review is from: Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture (Hardcover)
For your consideration, imagine a late nineteenth-century part-time farmer, mail carrier, and sometimes school teacher dwelling upon a plot of ground that runs down, quite literally, to the edge of the earth itself. Imagine him, further, as the most naive and most earnest man who ever lived and then, continuing in this vein, imagine a Paleolithic Alabama infested by active volcanoes where bands of wandering flagellants trespass by night, a time when the planets haven't yet settled into final form and forlorn men come to town fetching pigs to market at the end of a leash.
Now, stay one moment more as I explain that all this is seen through a fog of thought and memory and the best-cadenced prose we've seen in this country for a very long time.Fields of AsphodelLee
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5.0 out of 5 stars Most unusual, Strangely poetic & Funny, December 3, 2007
This review is from: Opportunities in Alabama Agriculture (Hardcover)
I loved this book. It just flows through geologic periods, through space and time with no limits. It's very dreamlike, with little realism. A young man, Ben, lives in Alabama with his father and ten brothers at the edge of the world among volcanoes and planets, measuring the world by the size of the family's property. Ben finally grows up, leaves the farm and ventures into the city to seek an education and get a job. He winds up running a dry goods store and has difficulty making money because he doesn't want to part with the merchandise he considers most beautiful. He marries a girl whose house has burned down, but who still has the land. Then he takes a test and winds up with a job as a mail carrier, able to support a family. This is a most unusual, imaginative and quite funny book. Fields of Asphodel
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