So, what’s this about really?
It is a description of a place and a time. The setting is rural Louisiana in the 1960s. Cajuns, Whites and Blacks are competing for land, for employment and for their very existence.
It is about a dysfunctional family--a father deeply tied to his daughter, a daughter deeply tied to her father, this being the Catherine of the book’s title, and a mother who needs to be needed. Each feels emotionally and sexually deprived. They want more. They are not satisfied.
Jackson, the central protagonist of the novel, he is not satisfied either. He left this hometown, has gotten himself educated in California, but has now returned. He is searching for more. Intellectual improvement, a promising future and of course love too. Disappointed by what he saw and experienced in California, he is at a loss of where and how to proceed next.
This is a book about frustrated earnings--physical, sexual, emotional and intellectual. Earnings are so strong and so frustrated that they overflow into violence.
The characters are searching for fulfillment, not always through themselves but through others.
The prose is abrupt, strong, sometimes brutal, interspersed with dialogs mirroring the language of the town’s people. Conversations are a mix of black, creole and Cajun dialects.
The story becomes more complicated than you originally think; it is this that raises it up a notch. The telling is powerful and moving. I ended up liking it, despite the fact that dysfunctional family stories are not my usual cup of tea.
Audible in the US sells the audiobook. It is produced by Blackstone Audio Incorporated. It is said t to be narrated by S. Patricia Bailey, but it isn’t. It is narrated instead by D.M. Green. Audible should provide accurate information! I have notified them; hopefully the information will be corrected. At the beginning I found the narration to be unprofessional. The tempo and volume varied, words were indistinct and the production of the recording was quite simply poor. As one proceeds the reading becomes stronger and clearer. The annoying variations subside. By the end, Green’s reading had improved a lot. I have given the narration three stars.