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Massacre Island
Twelve-year-old Nicolas de La Salle and his family sailed to La Louisiane (French Louisiana) with Governor Iberville to start a French settlement on the Gulf coast. Nicolas's father was with the explorer, Robert Cavelier de La Salle, when he reached ...
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The Untidy Pilgrim (Deep South Books)
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The Untidy Pilgrim (Deep South Books)

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Description:

This classic coming-of-age novel, winner of the Lippincott Fiction
Prize for Young Novelists in 1954, is a deliberately comic portrayal of
"Mobile madness," a malady specific to the Gulf Coast but recognizable
by all.

Eugene Walter's first novel is about a young man from a small central
Alabama town who goes south of the "salt line" to Mobile to work in a bank
and study law.  As soon as this unnamed pilgrim arrives, he realizes
that--although he is still in Alabama—he has entered a separate physical
kingdom of banana trees and palm fronds, subtropical heat and humidity,
old houses and lacy wrought-iron balconies. In the "land of clowns" and
the "kingdom of monkeys"—in the town that can claim the oldest Mardi Gras
in America--there is no Puritan work ethic; the only ruling forces are those
of chaos, craziness, and caprice. Such forces overtake the pilgrim, seduce
him away from the beaten career path, and set him on a zigzag course through
life.

The Untidy Pilgrim celebrates the insularity
as well as the eccentricity of southerners—and Mobilians, in particular—in
the mid-20th century. Cut off from the national mainstream, they are portrayed
as devoid of that particularly American angst over what to "do" and accomplish
with one's life, and indulge instead in art, music, cooking, nature, and
love.  In this novel Walter eschews the "gloom and doom" southern
literary tradition established by Faulkner, Capote, and McCullers to illuminate
the joyous quirkiness of human existence.

In 1954 this refreshing approach to the southern
scene garnered the praise of the judges for that year's Lippincott Fiction
Prize, Jacques Barzun, Diana Trilling, and Bernard DeVoto. This reissue
of the paperback in The University of Alabama Press's Deep South Books
series assures yet another generation the delight of Eugene Walter's award-winning
romp through Mobile.

Product Details:
Author: Eugene Walter
Paperback: 264 pages
Publisher: University Alabama Press
Publication Date: August 09, 2001
Language: English
ISBN: 0817311432
Product Length: 8.5 inches
Product Width: 5.74 inches
Product Height: 0.68 inches
Product Weight: 0.83 pounds
Package Length: 8.5 inches
Package Width: 5.74 inches
Package Height: 0.68 inches
Package Weight: 0.83 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 3 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 2.5 ( 3 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 11 found the following review helpful:

4A great Southern novelDec 05, 2003

I loved this book. The cast of characters can't be beat and the description of life in Mobile at the time made me think how different it is now, but how it hasn't changed at the same time. Anyone who read "Milking the Moon" should read this as well - I'd recommend reading it afterwards so you can appreciate Walter's view of the world.

3 of 4 found the following review helpful:

3A Sweet Tale from Old MobileMar 10, 2009
By stoic
An Untidy Pilgrim enjoys a cult following in Mobile, Alabama, because Mobile native Eugene Walter uses the book to provide a vivid description of the way things were here "back in the day." Today, Pilgrim stands as a sweet, coming-of-age story that reminds of us how much society has changed over the years.

Pilgrim concerns a young man's coming of age during an action-filled season. The best aspects of Pilgrim are its: a) vivid, eccentric people, b) depiction of a bygone era, and c) "cozy" plot that will give readers a warm fuzzy. Pilgrim also contains interesting settings that "come alive" for the reader.

As a Mobilian, I enjoyed this book. But I'm not sure that it is for everyone. The novel drags a bit too much in the middle and I had to plow through it a little bit. Moreover, some of the twists in the plot were far too easy to predict.

In the end, Pilgrim is a book that Mobilians and those who came of age in the South during the 1940s and 1950s will enjoy. Others probably will want to look elsewhere for the best in Southern fiction.

1 of 4 found the following review helpful:

1Just Badly WrittenJul 04, 2010
By C. E. Selby "Eric Selby"
I read about this book in a Pat Conroy book, his newest cookbook. And since he presented this author as an intersting character, I decided to purchase the book. Well, that was a bad decision. I waded through about forty pages and did something I seldom do: I tossed it away, but in a recyle can. May it become a better book in its next life.

 
 
 
 
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