Experience the captivating storytelling of James Lane Allen, renowned as "Kentucky's first important novelist," in his compelling work "Aftermath." Set in late 19th-century Kentucky, this book vividly portrays the region's culture and dialects, capturing the essence of the local color era with its rich vernacular and immersive narrative.
James Lane Allen was an American novelist and short story writer whose work often depicted the culture and dialects of his native Kentucky. His work is characteristic of the late-19th century local color era, when writers sought to capture the vernacular in their fiction. Allen has been described as "Kentucky's first important novelist."
Aftermath is a lovely companion to Kentucky Cardinal, and it follows out an interesting course surprisingly uncommon in 19th century literature: what happens after the romantic climax? The protagonists work to sustain their love and struggle to fit their own independent, disparate lives (particularly the narrator's life of solitude and nature) into one married life. But the text then traces a second aftermath: the narrator's gradual return to something more like his earlier life and his adjustment to life after the loss of Georgiana. If Aftermath's best isn't as good as the first 2/3rds of Kentucky Cardinal, I think it's generally better than the final third of Kentucky Cardinal. Definitely worth reading both.