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Charles Egbert Craddock (1850–1922)

Autor(a) de In the Tennessee Mountains

33+ Works 124 Membros 3 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) Mary Noailles Murfree wrote under the name Charles Egbert Craddock.

Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Obras de Charles Egbert Craddock

In the Tennessee Mountains (1884) 22 cópias
The Young Mountaineers (1977) 7 cópias
Down the Ravine (2010) 6 cópias
The Christmas Miracle (1911) 5 cópias
The Frontiersmen (1977) 4 cópias

Associated Works

Downhome: An Anthology of Southern Women Writers (1995) — Contribuinte — 116 cópias
The Vintage Book of American Women Writers (2011) — Contribuinte — 57 cópias
Best Loved Short Stories of Nineteenth Century America (2003) — Contribuinte — 39 cópias
Representative American Short Stories — Contribuinte — 5 cópias
Library of Southern Literature, Vol. VIII: Madison-Murfree (1909) — Contribuinte — 5 cópias
Representative Modern Short Stories (1929) — Contribuinte — 2 cópias
Tales of Two Countries (1955) — Contribuinte — 2 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Craddock, Charles Egbert
Nome de batismo
Murfree, Mary Noailles
Data de nascimento
1850-01-24
Data de falecimento
1922-07-31
Local de enterro
Evergreen Cemetery, Murfreesboro, Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, USA
Local de falecimento
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, USA
Aviso de desambiguação
Mary Noailles Murfree wrote under the name Charles Egbert Craddock.

Membros

Resenhas

This is not everyone's cup ot tea. But as someone who prefers 19th century American literature to most contemporary fiction, I found it a most enjoyable read. Her rendition of dialect takes some time to get used to, but I give her credit for faithfully trying to capture the speech she heard in the Tennessee Mountains. Murfree employs florid descriptions of scenery in her writing and that's true in this book. It might be "too much" by modern standards, but her readers had not been bombarded with high-definition, full color images from every corner of the globe. In that context, her word pictures enhance the story. Murfree's vocabulary is also a point of interest. I kept a dictionary handy, because in the just the first few pages I encountered: piggin, quailed, fetich, supersedure, vicinage, supernal and purblind. Her elaborate narrative style succeeds in fleshing out the characters and developing their subtle nuances and interior conflicts. One-dimensional stereotypes are par for the course in this type of fiction, but I appreciate how Murfree transcends that to create characters who hold our interest. This has a reputation for being among her better works, and based on what I've read of Murfree, I would agree. Someone new to Murfree would do well to start with this book. The University of Nebraska Press edition is especially nice, with a gorgeous cover, clean text and a helpful introduction. One clarification: I picked up this book because it was mentioned as touching upon the Cherokee legend of the "little people." Unless I'm missing something, the "little people" of this book aren't the mischievous, elfin creatures sometimes seen in the woods today (if you believe the reports) but a race of short-statured people who preceded the Cherokees in the Appalachian Mountains. In the introduction, Marjorie Pryse provides helpful background on the 19th archaeological search for these "pygmies" and that is a big part of the storyline for the novel. Fans of Robert Morgan or Charles Frazier would do well to ovecome the challenges posed by Murfree's "antiquated" style. The reward is definitely worth the initial effort.… (mais)
 
Marcado
PerryEury | 1 outra resenha | Dec 28, 2018 |
8 short stories of local color fiction
 
Marcado
SHCG | Jun 12, 2018 |
A strange, slow, rewarding book, this has been rescued from obscurity thanks to the University of Nebraska's ‘19th-century American Women Writers’ series, but it deserves to be read for much better reasons than just representing various gradations of nationality, timezone or gender. As a description of Tennessee mountain life, it's a real wonder, and anyone who enjoys rich, chewy prose will find a lot to get stuck into here.

The story, such as it is, concerns an archaeologist who wants to investigate a mysterious pygmy burial-ground near a little community in the Great Smoky Mountains. To be honest it doesn't quite sustain the length of the book: I'd love to read her short stories and I suspect she'd be better over shorter distances.

But the pleasure comes from the richly Romantic, even Gothic, atmosphere of the book, which has a powerful sense of the sublime in nature and a tendency to the melancholy and the mysterious. Her prose is portentous and elaborate with an archaic vocabulary. When it misfires she can seem very clichéd:

There was fire in her serene eyes, like a flare of sunset in the placid depths of a lake.

But when it works, the effects can be strangely wonderful, with something of the ornate power of Mervyn Peake, albeit here inspired by the natural world:

the rising [moon] was visible through the gap in the mountains; much of the world seemed in some sort unaware of its advent, and lay in the shadow, dark and stolid, in a dull invisibility, as though without form and void. The moon had not yet scaled the heights of the great range; only that long clifty gorge cleaving its mighty heart was radiant with the forecast of the splendors of the night, and through this vista, upon the mystic burial-ground, fell the pensive light like a benison.

One character, looking out at a mountain path in the darkness, sees how it appears and reappears over the slopes,

...now in the clear sheen, now lost in the black shadow, reappearing at an unexpected angle, as if in the darkness the continuity were severed, and it existed only in sinuous sections.

This is lovely stuff. The elaborate precision of her descriptions seems all the more pronounced for being juxtaposed with the dialect Murfree uses to write her characters' dialogue. The book's first line of speech, absolutely representative, is this:

‘I do declar' I never war so set back in my life ez I felt whenst that thar valley man jes' upped an' axed me 'bout'n them thar Leetle Stranger People buried yander on the rise,’ declared Stephen Yates.

Some might find it irritating; I liked it, once I'd got used to deciphering it. And (as the introduction to this edition persuasively argues) by putting dialect right next to the most baroque of descriptive prose, there is a kind of inherent argument that dialect itself can be a useful prose style.

And Murfree makes the case pretty well, on balance: this is a rich and fascinating book, which well deserves to be brought back into print.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Widsith | 1 outra resenha | Dec 27, 2009 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
33
Also by
7
Membros
124
Popularidade
#161,165
Avaliação
½ 3.4
Resenhas
3
ISBNs
67
Idiomas
1

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