Rattlebone by Maxine Clair is her award-winning themed collection of 1950s-set literary stories set in a fictional African-American community in Kansas, free courtesy of publisher Agate's Digital imprint, who are e-printing it from its original 1994 Farrar, Strauss & Giroux hardcover (and who quite generously gave us another one of Clair's literary fiction works
just the other week; couponable @ Kobo if you missed it).
This won the 1994 Heartland Prize (
Wikipedia) for literary works which was created by the Chicago Tribune newspaper, in the Fiction category.
Currently free, probably just for another day or so @
Amazon (not available to Canadians).
And this has been the selected 3rd (non-repeat) free ebook thread of the day.
Because I happen to like prize-winning literary fiction which illuminates cultures-within-cultures in the form of interconnecting stories, which is just one of those things which happens to be a reading kink of mine.
Enjoy!
Description
In Rattlebone, a "fictional" black community north of Kansas City, the smell of manure and bacon from Armour's Packing House is everywhere; Shady Maurice's roadhouse plays the latest jazz; the best eggs are sold by the Red Quanders; and gospel rules at the Strangers Rest Baptist Church.
This is the black Midwest of the 1950s, when towns could count their white folks on one hand—the years before the Civil Rights movement came along and changed everything. In perfectly cadenced vernacular, Maxine Clair speaks to us through the voices of Rattlebone's citizens: October Brown, the new schoolteacher with a camel's walk and shoulder-padded, to-the-nines dresses; Irene Wilson, naive and wise, who must grapple with her parent's failing marriage as she steps eagerly into adulthood; and Thomas Pemberton, owner of the local rooming house, an old man with a young heart.
Sparkling with lyricism, Clair's interconnected stories celebrate the natural beauty of the Midwest and the dignity and vitality of these most ordinary lives. Rattlebone, winner of the Heartland Prize for fiction, is a tremendous work by a supremely talented writer, now available for the first time in digital form.