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The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish [Hardcover]

Elise Blackwell (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 20, 2007
As the waters of the Mississippi

rise in 1927, the moneyed powers

of Louisiana must decide which

Parish to flood in order to save

New Orleans.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

On the eve of Hurricane Katrina, the now elderly narrator, Louis Proby, remembers the great floods of his small Louisiana town in 1927, recounting an intimate, resonant history of the era of Huey Long and Marcus Garvey. Louis, 17, is the son of Cypress Parish's superintendent, William Proby, who ascended the local logging ranks and regularly has to compromise himself in deals with the hardscrabble laborers and casinos in order to keep order in the town, as Louis painfully witnesses. Louis is a dutiful son, smitten with a pretty girl from a French family, Nanette Lançon, and intent on becoming a doctor, as per his father's plans. Offered the job of driving lumber company official Charles Segrist to and from New Orleans, Louis is granted entrée into the grand seedy clubs of the Crescent City and learns a little not just about prostitutes, alcohol and back deals with Isleños bootleggers Olivier Menard and Orlando Funes, but also of plans to blow up a Cypress Parish levee and thus flood the area in order to save New Orleans. Blackwell (Hunger) elegantly chronicles Louis's conflict between protecting his first love and his obligations to his father, though Louis finds he betrays both. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

On the eve of Hurricane Katrina, 90-year-old scientist Louis Proby sits in his New Orleans apartment and remembers the defining moment of his young adulthood--the 1927 flood that wiped out his hometown, Cypress Parish, Louisiana. In spare and telling detail, he recalls his first love, French immigrant Nanette Lancon; his uneducated but cunning father's rise to camp foreman on a logging crew; and his job as chauffeur for the region's most powerful politician, who gives him a hard-nosed lesson in power politics. Louis' more personal memories are interspersed with informational background on the construction of the levees, race relations, and a nearby leper colony. In the novel's denouement, Louis sits in on the meeting where the city fathers decide to intentionally dynamite the levees and flood Cypress Parish in an ill-advised bid to save New Orleans from damage. Blackwell (Hunger, 2003) ably evokes an earlier time and keeps the tone deliberately low-key throughout, which, in some ways, only serves to underscore all that was sacrificed that day. Timely reading from a thoughtful, subtle writer. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Unbridled Books; 1st edition (March 20, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1932961313
  • ISBN-13: 978-1932961317
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,187,253 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Elise Blackwell is the author of three critically hailed novels: Hunger, The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish, and Grub. Her books have been chosen for numerous "best of the year" lists, including the Los Angeles Times, Sydney Morning Herald, and Kirkus. Her short stories and cultural criticism have appeared in Witness, Topic, Seed, Global City Review, Quick Fiction, and elsewhere. Her fourth novel, An Unfinished Score, will be published by Unbridled Books in spring 2010. For more information about Elise and her books, please visit her website: http://eliseblackwell.com/

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An old man may remember the facts of his youth, but he cannot always remember what they felt like.", March 20, 2007
This review is from: The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish (Hardcover)
(4.5 stars) Writing from the point of view of elderly New Orleans native Louis Proby on the eve of Hurricane Katrina, author Elise Blackwell fills this novel with vibrant scenes of Cypress Parish, just to the south of New Orleans. The contemporary Cypress Parish, with its asphalt highway connecting it to New Orleans, its fast food restaurants, and its "noseful of stink that only a paper mill can churn out" offers a sharp contrast to the way of life in which the speaker grew up. As he reminisces about "the water that rose in 1927," Louis tells about the innocence of his childhood, and his understanding of his father, his family, and their values.

What follows is a beautifully realized story, a mixture of delicate lyricism with harsh reality, as Louis, then seventeen, discovers the way the world works, and especially the way it works in New Orleans. As he discovers love with one of his classmates, he also discovers new truths about his father and his friends, depicting the everyday injustices of whites against blacks, including some in which he himself participates. Some men, like Charles Segrist and Olivier Menard, he learns, control such vast sums of money that they can even control political outcomes.

Throughout the novel, and running parallel with Louis's personal story, is his story of the Mississippi River as it reaches flood stage in 1927, so intensely depicted that it assumes the status of a major character. Whirlpools so fast and so big that they can swallow large animals, and even a house, reflect the turbulent and unpredictable currents which run beneath the seemingly placid surface. As the river starts its ominous rise, flood bulletins issued by meteorologists are ignored, and as the river reaches its crest, Louis's agonized understanding of how the world of men works also peaks.

From the outset, Blackwell's wondrous descriptions and sense impressions create a vivid understanding of time and place as she balances the most lyrical with the most realistic details--in Grenada, for example, Louis notes that the odor of the sugar factory blends with that of the abattoir. Exceptionally precise, Blackwell wastes not a word, developing strong themes of growing up, learning responsibility, and respecting the natural world--while resisting the temptation to tug at the heartstrings by drawing obvious parallels with the recent Katrina disaster. Beautifully crafted and exceptionally well realized, with quotations from Pliny the Elder to give it additional universality, this short novel puts the Katrina disaster into the context of the New Orleans floods of 1922 and 1927--and even floods from Roman times. n Mary Whipple



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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "It's always a mistake to believe you can control something wild.", March 20, 2007
This review is from: The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish (Hardcover)


Reflecting the turbulent history of Louisiana and the ungovernable Mississippi River, this novel, written while the protagonist awaits the full force of Katrina, harkens back to another devastating flood in 1927. Like the present day reality of lives in jeopardy, the earlier tragedy was also exacerbated by damaged levees and the sacrifice of one area of a population for another, in this case the destruction of Cypress Parish to save greater New Orleans, a flourishing city in the late 1920s. Now an elderly man reminiscing on his youth, Louis Proby begins his narrative at seventeen, on the cusp of manhood, a dutiful son with a love of learning. Although his father wants him to become a physician, Louis leans towards the natural sciences, describing the natural habitat of Cypress Parish through the eyes of one who would retain those images over the passing years.

William Proby, a logger and company-town superintendent, teaches his son some early lessons about survival in the world at large, taking Louis along as he deals with parish life. But Louis learns as well from the men he meets as a driver for a wealthy businessman, more sophisticated and worldly entrepreneurs, as well as experiencing the rush of first love with a woman he will never see again after the flood. In any case, the careful plans of many families are swept away by the rising tide of the Big Muddy, the levees unable to stave off the ravages of nature's excess and man's intemperate planning. To be sure, powerful men realize the enormity of the danger to the parish, dire warnings of the coming disaster reported months before it occurs, but such is the voracious nature of profit that a few wealthy men make decisions that will destroy the futures of those with no voice to ameliorate such decisions. Thus it happens, Cypress Parish is dynamited, inundated with flood water to save the more important and burgeoning New Orleans, all of Louis' childhood memories submerged in a watery grave.

Retelling his youth, Louis describes a father who is a fair but harsh taskmaster, the differences of white and black existence in 1927 Louisiana, the social construct that rigidly restricts congress between races and the occasional case of leprosy that continues to plague the area. Against the background of the beauty of a natural environment on the banks of the Mississippi, Louis' first brush with intimacy is beautifully framed by his inchoate desire and the pull of family responsibility, painfully torn by the choices he is forced to make. His family quartered with the whites during the flood, Louis doesn't report much of the scandalous treatment of blacks after the disaster, but does capture that particular nostalgia with which the elderly remember the distant days of childhood. For all the attraction of those days, clearly the same harsh societal restrictions continue to mar the image of a simple America. Albeit softened by memory, life is never as beneficent as it seems in one's youth. Luan Gaines/2007.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning Novel Set in Louisiana during 1927 Flood, July 3, 2007
This review is from: The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish (Hardcover)
In this stunning novel, Elise Blackwell beautifully interweaves natural history, human history, and the events surrounding the 1927 Mississippi River flood. Louis Proby is a boy of 17 during that spring, and he learns a great deal about what it means to be a man. His teachers include an artist who loses himself in the natural world and a man of wealth and power who takes Louis into the back rooms of New Orleans where a group of men with a great financial stake in that great city decide to blow up the levees and flood "Cypress" Parish in order to save New Orleans. The human cost of the flood is in here, but above all this is the story of the good and bad in people, and how difficult it can be for a young person to figure out which is which, all of it told with the colors and rhythms of the Mississippi escaping its banks. I would highly recommend this fine novel.
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