“Life’s so sweet when you know you ain’t no coward no more.” -Charlie
“We had all done the same thing sometime or another, we had all seen our brother, sister, mama, daddy insulted once and didn’t do a thing about it.” -Rufe
Ernest J. Gaines takes readers to the Marshall Plantation`located near the town of Bayonne in Southwestern,Louisiana. First up, we meet young “Snookum” in this novel, on the Marshall Quarters which is a narrow, small, white, country road with weeds on both sides. As this Fantastic Storyteller continues describing the Quarters, he allows readers to understand this setting resembles an actual ghost town. “Snookum” is eating at the table with his family when Candy Marshall (partial owner of the plantation) comes to their front yard and tell him to run without stopping and gather up Reverand Jameson, Corrine, and the other men to meet and Mathu’s house…
Surprisingly, when Sheriff Mapes arrives at Mathu’s house, he witnesses a sight he has not ever seen in his life, but it was not just..
“A Gathering Of Men.”
Each chapter unravels a voice of a new character on the Marshall Quarters, uniquely. And, as this story continually develops, readers learn more about these characters’ identity, family history, and their personal reasoning for the “Gathering.” 🔆
Excerpt:
“What’s the matter with me? Woman, what’s the matter with me? All these years we been living together, woman, you still don’t know what’s the matter with me? The years we done struggled in George Medlow’s field, making him richer and richer and us getting poorer and poorer—and you still don’t know what’s the matter with me? The years I done stood out on that front garry and cussed the world, the times I done come home drunk and beat you for no reason at all–
and, woman, you still don’t know what’s the matter with me?” Oliver, woman! I screamed at her. “Oliver, how they let him die in the hospital just ‘cause he was black. No doctor to serve him, let hime bleed to death, ‘cause he was black. And, you ask me what’s wrong with me?” -Matthew Lincoln Brown aka Mat
For me, this was a novel that needed to be read very carefully since there are so many different narrators who recount events from their point of view. Even of other characters. I believe it was 15 narrators in total. It is an extremely thought provoking novel just as all of Gaines’ novel brings to readers. In this novel, he shows readers (through his characters) how: some are willing and ready to progress, some are willing to progress, some are completely oblivious to things that have happened around them, some have are still living in the past and refuse to move forward.
Another Treasure by Ernest J. Gaines of Men reaffirming their Humanity and Manhood. It’s an Honor to add this to my ~ 2024 Reading Challenge ~ 🪷