Mary Lee Settle, Founder of the Pen/Faulkner Award, was born a couple decades after fellow expatriate writers, like the revered Ernest Hemingway. But she has long been neglected, which is a damn shame. She did not write like her minimalistic contemporaries or her overelaborate predecessors; her prose, a sure sign of her liberal Southern American heritage, are not only beautiful aesthetically, but enhanced with meaning and purpose; the best kind of writing. Settle cared deeply about “a people’s history,” of fairness, and justice. She wrote not just for Art’s sake but humanity’s sake.
Choices reads like a love-song dedicated to rebels and revolutionaries everywhere; jumping from scene to scene through the eyes of Melinda Kregg, southern belle turned “activist.” From the mining strikes of the 30s, to the oft forgotten Spanish Civil War, through the terror of WWII, the evils of the KKK, and triumph of Civil Rights Movement of the 50s and 60s, Melinda feels like a re-imagined version of Settle herself, who had lived through, and participated in, these historical watersheds. I am anxious to read her famous Beulah Quintet, a similar love-song, but dedicated to a different time period in American History.
So if you’re wondering which 20th century classic to read next, do yourself a favor and put "The Great Gatsby" (for now) back on the shelf and seek out "Choices" at your local bookstore. For an authentic feel, make a mix of old Appalachian Mountain songs, Ragtime, 30s and 40s Jazz and Blues, Labor and Spanish Civil War songs, and some American hits from the early 60s; play this softly in the background, you won’t regret it.