Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The book I'm carrying around...Salvage the Bones


Salvage the BonesSalvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Its taking me longer to read this book then it really should because I usually wait 'til I've climbed in the bed at the end of a long day to read.  Okay, maybe more information than you really need for a book review, but it does serve a point - this isn't the book to read as you are fighting your eyelids.  That said, I do like this book.  Jesmyn Ward has pretty, lyrical writing, even when describing a dog fight or tangle with a tractor.  Some of her writing is so pretty, when something bad happens, it catches you by surprise.


The book opens with a pitbull in labor - I know, makes you wonder where's this story going, right?  We then meet Skeetah, the owner of the dog; Randall, his older brother; Junior, their baby brother; and their sister, Esch, our main character, a tomboy-ish, yet sexually promiscuous girl, hanging out with her brothers and their friends, figuring out that she's pregnant.  They're being raised by their usually drunk father, having lost their mother when she died after giving birth to the youngest brother.  As I moved through the story, I saw China, the pitbull, as a metaphor for the kids' lives.  She (the dog) is the primary mother figure, the one Esch looks to for a model of what motherhood looks like.


The suspense in the story is not only built into the pace of Ward's writing, but the timing of the story.  Its set in a rural area Mississippi days before Hurricane Katrina.  You want to yell through the pages "get the dog, get your dad, and get out of town!" while at the same time, wondering how or if, this family is going to survive.  You revisit those questions that ran through the nation's head as we watched the waters flood New Orleans - why didn't they get out?  What were they thinking?  What are they going to do now?  Ward provides some answers, at least for this family.  They were pulling the framing out of their attic for plywood to board up the house and were eating Ramen noodles for every meal every day.  They clearly did not have the means to evacuate, and if so, they weren't getting far in the not-really-running pickup truck sitting in the dirt yard.


Salvage the Bones is a story of love and desperation, and the things that happen when those two strong feelings are confused, one for the other.  I think if I can sneak some time in daylight, now that we have this extra hour, I could finish this book in one sitting and see how Esch, her brothers, their dad, and the dog make out in the storm.


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