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Ugly to Start With [Paperback]

John Michael Cummings
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 1, 2011

Jason Stevens is growing up in picturesque, historic Harpers Ferry, West Virginia in the 1970s. Back when the roads are smaller, the cars slower, the people more colorful, and Washington, D.C. is way across the mountains—a winding sixty-five miles away.
 
Jason dreams of going to art school in the city, but he must first survive his teenage years. He witnesses a street artist from Italy charm his mother from the backseat of the family car. He stands up to an abusive husband—and then feels sorry for the jerk. He puts up with his father’s hard-skulled backwoods ways, his grandfather’s showy younger wife, and the fist-throwing schoolmates and eccentric mountain characters that make up Harpers Ferry—all topped off by a basement art project with a girl from the poor side of town.
 
Ugly to Start With punctuates the exuberant highs, bewildering midpoints, and painful lows of growing up, and affirms that adolescent dreams and desires are often fulfilled in surprising ways.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Beautiful and gut-wrenchingly raw.”
Blake Nelson, author of Paranoid Park, Destroy All Cars, and Recovery Road

"The linked stories inUgly to Start With invite us into one boy's life on the margins of historic Harpers Ferry. With an appropriate balance of grit and wonder, John Cummings crafts a coming-of-age narrative of a son striving for the truest expression of his identity in the midst of a family and a place where he often feels like an outsider. These stories have a hard edge to them and a hard-earned wisdom, the sort we only get in retrospect if we're lucky."
Lee Martin, author of The Bright Forever and Break the Skin

"By turns tender, witty and unsettling, Ugly to Start With is a strong and memorable collection.  The stories are carried along by Cummings' graceful prose and pacing, and are charged with the class and racial tensions encoded in the DNA of the United States.  As a group they sketch a compelling portrait of a boy [adolescent?] trying to make sense of his town, his father, and ultimately himself."
Brendan Short, author of Dream City

"John Michael Cummings' prose is anything but Ugly to Start With - I read this book in two sittings, and  it was hilarious and melancholy and singular.  I've never read about a Harpers Ferry, or a family, like this, and their conversations, their houses, and their lives deserve a wide audience.  I can't wait to pass this book along."
Susan Straight is the author of seven novels, including Highwire Moon, a Finalist for the National Book Award and a Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing at University of California, Riverside.

"John Cummings’ collection of short stories, Ugly to Start With, breathes in the atmosphere of  Harper’s Ferry, West Virginia, which plays a central role in many of the conflicts over innocence and experience, development and preservation, insider and outsider, and nature and community.  In this lively and sufficient landscape are a trio—a young boy, his mother, and  his father, who face the complexities of  knowledge of place. Sometimes knowing is painful.  In other stories, there are momentary reprieves or insights provided by the boy’s sharp and wry view of life where “clocks had stopped long ago,” “one big tree” suffices to hide a multitude of sins, and in his crying he can hear his own future unhappiness echo through his body.  This a lovely, funny, melancholy, and important collection of coming-of-age stories."
Maxine Chernoff, author of A Boy in Winter

“In Ugly to Start With, John Michael Cummings has gathered a baker’s dozen of stories full of the warmth, innocence, and holy terrors of childhood. An auspicious debut.”
Peter Selgin, author of Drowning Lessons

“Pitch-perfect West Virginia voices.”
Enid Shomer, author of Tourist Season: Stories

“Like Faulkner, Cummings knows the strong undertow that blood exerts on ambition and self-preservation.”
Charlotte Holmes, Associate Professor, Penn State University. Her stories have appeared in many journals including Epoch, New Letters, Story, and The New Yorker

“Sparkling, deeply intelligent, and often heartbreakingly funny.”
Eileen Pollack, Director, MFA Program in Creative Writing, University of Michigan and author of The Rabbit in the Attic, In the Mouth, and Paradise

“Like Huck Finn and Holden Caulfield, John Michael Cummings’ teenage narrator reveals the troubled and tender and tough heart of a place both split and knit by class, race, and family.”
Wayne Karlin, author of Wandering Souls: Journeys With the Dead and the Living in Viet Nam and Prisoners

"In Ugly to Start With John Michael Cummings tells the story of a uniquely unhappy family with a gracious but disgruntled mother and an idiosyncratic, autocratic, sometimes brutal father who doesn’t believe in having guests or letting anything go to waste. The father with his extremism in self-reliance binds the family together for a while, but then is the cause of its flying apart. The stories embrace other painfully failed families and individuals– all richly human and somehow, seen though the eyes of the young main character, hopeful even in despair."
Meredith Sue Willis, author of Oradell at Sea

“John Cummings is a prolific American short story writer and among the most talented of the rising generation of new regionalists  who have inherited the mantle of Bobbie Ann Mason, Barry Hannah and Larry Brown.  In Ugly to Start With, a series of thirteen interrelated stories set in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia, he tackles the challenges of boyhood adventure and family conflict in a taut, crystalline style that captures the triumphs and tribulations of small-town life.  Not since John Brown's raid has Harpers Ferry generated such excitement for readers.   Cummings has a gift for transcending the particular experiences to his characters to capture the universal truths of human affection and suffering--emotional truths that the members of his audience will recognize from their own experiences of childhood and adolescence.  Cummings is a gifted author who has paid his literary dues, publishing numerous short stories in the nation's most prestigious journals.  As readers, we are fortunate that he has waited so long to produce a first collection, as he is now able to gather together the very best of his short prose  Needless to say, none of his stories disappoint.   Each story is a riveting psychological journey, a reminder of what it's like to be young and hopeful and uncertain.  This collection has defined West Virginia's eastern panhandle as Cummings country, as much as the Salinas Valley belongs to Steinbeck or working-class Albany belongs to William Kennedy. “
Jacob Appel, author of “Dyads” and “The Vermin Episode”

About the Author

John Michael Cummings is a short story writer and novelist from Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. He is the award-winning author of The Night I Freed John Brown.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 168 pages
  • Publisher: Vandalia Press; 1st Edition edition (October 1, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 193597808X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1935978084
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,622,360 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Michael Cummings' short stories have appeared in more than seventy-five literary journals, including North American Review, The Chattahoochee Review, The Kenyon Review, and The Iowa Review. Twice he has been nominated for The Pushcart Prize. His short story "The Scratchboard Project" received an honorable mention in The Best American Short Stories 2007.

His debut novel, The Night I Freed John Brown (Penguin Group), was the 2009 winner of The Paterson Prize for Books for Young People (Grades 7-12) and one of ten books recommended by USA TODAY for Black History Month. Rave reviews appeared in Kirkus Reviews, The Boston Globe, The Buffalo News, and BookPage, along with five award-winning literary magazines, including Mid-American Review, Black Warrior Review, and The Texas Review. Blurbs included Newbery Honor Recipient Ruth White, North Carolina Poet Laureate Fred Chappell, and Pushcart Prize winner R.T. Smith.

His short story collection, Ugly To Start With, will be published in October of 2011 by West Virginia University Press.

A native of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, Mr. Cummings has worked as a reporter, editor, teacher, and tutor, most recently at Seminole State College and Lake-Sumter Community College in central Florida.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars 'Full of hollers, twisting roads, and shadows.' January 13, 2012
Format:Paperback
John Michael Cummings writes short stories like few other authors. Though his latest book - UGLY TO START WITH - is posted as a series of short stories, what it seems to this reader is a series of memory vignettes of not only a young boy Jason growing up in Harper's Ferry, West Virginia, but also a running dialogue of what it feels like taking the steps to becoming an adult for any boy. It is 'full of hollers, twisting roads, and shadows', to quote a description of this twisted little town. And that is what makes it more universal, more than just a quasi-camouflaged autobiographical novel by a lad who learned life's lessons in the shadow of an abusive, poverty tainted family in the historical but crumbling chards of an old American town not far from the nation's capitol. His writing style is appropriately bleak, terse, and so rich in imagery that, just as Jason's mother doesn't need to visit Italy because she has a book of pictures of that foreign place, we feel we have witnessed Harper's Ferry after reading this collection of thirteen window stories.

At times it is disturbing to read this book of short stories, thinking that there is some linear pattern, some semblance to an examination of the maturing of the book's main character. If that seems to be the case when reading this book, then jump around and read the stories out of order. That increases appreciation for the gifts of Cummings' writing skills. The title story of the book, 'Ugly to start with' concerns a feral cat (Skinny Minnie) who at first provides comfort to Jason while he is confined to his bed with a case of shingles, but the story progresses until after some cat fights the Skinny Minnie is increasingly absent and becomes target practice for Jason's BB gun: the spectrum of relationships, whether to animals or to family or to friends rises out of the dust of this tale. Jason's need for relating to a girlfriend is the subject of 'The Fence', a study in demarcations between families challenged but not only the approach/avoidance of a young boy and girl, but of a wandering father's secrets. 'Two Tunes' wanders through a family's idiosyncrasies as to being an active member of a tourist attraction town or maintaining the slovenly shack they call home. The stories contain some highs and some hurtful lows that influence the way Jason will remember childhood and adolescence that will mold his adult life.

For this reader the strongest story in the book, and certainly the most challenging for readers is 'Carter' - a tale of Jason's introduction to and affiliation with a lonely old bisexual man, an experience that as well as any described in literature defines the panic at a young lad's facing his own concerns about his sexuality. Every word, every pause, every moment of description is superb, brave writing, and after reading this pungent story there will be little doubt that John Michael Cummings is a major new talent. Grady Harp, January 12
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5.0 out of 5 stars But Lovely to Read January 14, 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I don't usually enjoy short stories, but this collection is like an episodic novel with recurring characters. John Michael Cummings lovingly but unsparingly recreates a boyhood in Harpers Ferry, WV, when times were simpler but not less harsh. Like the stories themselves, his writing style is direct and impactful. This book is one to reread and enjoy again.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Funny and Endearing October 26, 2012
Format:Paperback
On reading the opening story "The World Around Us" from John Cummings collection of short stories, I knew that I was going to find some answers and get a glimpse into small town America.
"Ugly to Start With" is a collection of interrelated stories that escapes being a novel simply because you can't quite always connect the events, the people and the passing of time. The constants are our protagonist and narrator, a teenaged white boy, Jason and his home town of Harper Ferry.
I don't usually read short stories and I am not a frequent reader of American fiction, however, I was pulled in from the first story. Cummings uses the opening story "The World Around Us' to pin the location of Harper's Ferry not only geographically but also to drive home the nature of the mundane existence of Jason's boyhood. There is this really funny exchange of dialog in which Jason and his mother argue about the distance of Harper's Ferry from Washington DC and whether that's long enough to justify never visiting the capital. With "Two Tunes" we get a glimpse of Jason's dysfunctional home which has its moments of redemption.
The rest of the stories we are introduced to some other characters in Harper's Ferry that Jason or his family has had to deal with. As a reader your heart often reaches out to Jason's pitiful existence, but Cumming's keeps the narrative light and does not get into philosophizing.
"The Scratchboard Project" is another endearing story tackling adolescence love. I like how Cumming's describes Jason's reaction into stepping for the first time into an African-American household, and his confusion and mumbling respect. Everything is new and weird, but only when he gets to know his classmate Ty better, does he realize that how similar and more human they both are in spite of the color of their skin.
t may sound clichéd but my favorite story of the lot is "Ugly to Start with" which is the story of a cat which the family adopts. Skinny Minnie is beautiful and brings comfort to the family but soon she falls sick and gets into fights into with other cats. As her usefulness wanes off so does the interest of the family . There was something about this story that was too close to the shallowness of human nature, that makes us want to look into our inner selves. I remember that I wanted to cry when I finished reading it.
Cumming's writing is fluid. The language is simple, effective and potent. Some of the chapters are really well written. The book could have done with a better cover though
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Gritty and Moving
In this gritty coming of age novel, Jason Stevens is a teenager from the wrong side of the tracks in a small town in 1970s West Virginia. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Lisa Morguess
4.0 out of 5 stars A New favourite read
Ugly to Start With is in a league of its own. From the content, to the format, to the quality of writing... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Nylon Admiral
4.0 out of 5 stars Coming of Age in West Virginia
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia is a fulfilling setting for this coming-of-age tale. Jason is figuring out where he fits in this strange world. Read more
Published 8 months ago by L. Pennington
4.0 out of 5 stars The Beauty of Ugly
Jason tries to find ways to make his life better than it is now. Ugly to start with means his young life with his family and area he lives in has always been a little ugly. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Shannon M. Mcgee
5.0 out of 5 stars Billiant, pure and true
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and highly recommend it for the mature reader.

The reader is "there," feeling and living the pages of the stories. Read more
Published 9 months ago by C. Morris
4.0 out of 5 stars Really good coming of age book
Check out my review here: [...]
Ugly To Start With is, by far, unlike any other book I have ever read. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Paige Murray
3.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful combination of heart-touching short stories
Ugly To Start With is not a novel, but a compilation of short stories John Cummings had previously written. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Emma
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting short stories
The story is set in the 1970s. His father was a tipical man of history - you know, like only the man has a say in everything. Read more
Published 10 months ago by neabarabea
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Read For Those Who Appreciate Psychological Fiction
In his analysis of this work, Philly.com's reviewer Frank Wilson states that "To call John Michael Cummings' Ugly From the Start a collection of short stories would be imprecise. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Liz W.
3.0 out of 5 stars Growing Up is Tough...
Review:

Ugly to Start With is a series of short stories documenting several events during Jason Stevens' 1970's journey through adolescence. Read more
Published 11 months ago by The Paperback Pursuer
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