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The Trees
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Initial Impressions: The Trees, by Percival Everett – May 2024
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Tom, "Big Daddy"
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Apr 24, 2024 11:46AM

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My hoopla has the audio. I didn’t think it was as good as James but still worthy read. Quirky and clever were my comments.
My hoopla only has audio for this one. Definitely library specific. I’ve been having to get my borrows at midnight bc if I wait until 7 am, the borrows are gone for the day.
The audio for James was amazing!!!!!
The audio for James was amazing!!!!!
I got this at my library, and as of right now there are still a few on their shelves. It's older, so a 4 week borrow. I'm looking forward to reading it.

“It would be very easy to write a dark, dense novel about lynching that no one will read; there has to be an element of seduction. Humour is a fantastic tool because you can use it to get people to relax and then do anything you want to them. The absurdity of the inattention to the subject was the driving force of the comedy, but the novel lives as much in turning around stereotypes as it does in revealing the truth of lynching. I’m happy to say I’ve pissed off a lot of people for my stereotyping of the white characters. Someone in an interview [objected] and my response was: “Good, how does it feel?” When I started the book, I said to my wife [the writer Danzy Senna], “I’m not being fair to white people”, and then I said, well, fuck it: I just went wild.”
https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...


I agree and often audio is not for me but James was an exception. I decided early on that if I got to Trees I'd probably prefer reading it.
Thank you for sharing that. I had missed watching the last 3 Sundays. I’ve saved his talk at Parnassus for when we read James.
I read this no so long ago, so I'll follow the conversation. I lent my copy to someone so I can't re-read.

I started this morning and am already halfway done. It's a potato chip book.
Very short chapters that make it easy to "just read 1 more". I think Everett is an evil genius who is also very funny. I've never read anything else by him.
Very short chapters that make it easy to "just read 1 more". I think Everett is an evil genius who is also very funny. I've never read anything else by him.
I just learned that he will be speaking in San Francisco on June 3rd and the ticket price includes a signed copy of James. Guess where I'll be that evening.

I do remember tho that I thought it was funny - while still maintaining its mystery. However I did not like the ending of the story. For me it just seemed out of kilter to the rest of the book. I did not remember why I read this until I reread the synopsis and saw the Emmett Till reference. I pick up and read anything that references Till - - so that was the reason.
Sandi, have you see the movie "Till"? I watched it on Amazon Prime. It of course replays the murder and the incident that preceded it, but is mostly about his mother's insistence on making the world see what they had done to her boy. I recommend it.
On another note, I wonder if places like the Acme Cadaver Suppy Company really exist. I suppose they have to. Not a business I would want to go anywhere near.
On another note, I wonder if places like the Acme Cadaver Suppy Company really exist. I suppose they have to. Not a business I would want to go anywhere near.

I have a few books going so I won’t be able to read this as quickly as I’d like but I’m so looking forward to it and also looking forward to checking out everything else he’s written.
Diane wrote: "Sandi, have you see the movie "Till"? I watched it on Amazon Prime. It of course replays the murder and the incident that preceded it, but is mostly about his mother's insistence on making the worl..."
I watched ''Till'' last year and thought it was excellent. Highly recommended, especially after reading The Trees.
I watched ''Till'' last year and thought it was excellent. Highly recommended, especially after reading The Trees.

Yes I have seen it. There were two on at about the same time - one more about what happened to Emmett and the other one more a documentary about his mother. Both were good.
Mississippians please don't be insulted. At one point, one of the characters says that Mississippi should have been a better state, I forget the exact quote. It reminded me of a well-traveled co-worker who once told me that Mississippi was a waste of a great state. Since it has some beautiful places and certainly fostered some great writers, (Faulkner and Welty, for two), I think they were both referring to the racism there.
I finished and will put all further comments on final thoughts. This is one you shouldn't miss if you can get to it.
I finished and will put all further comments on final thoughts. This is one you shouldn't miss if you can get to it.




I imagine the success of James has caused a lot of people to look for his backlist. My library has 12 copies of Trees, but it's a 4 week book borrow. I got mine early.


Recommended as usual, either before or after reading. Meanwhile that's yet another book in my reading list with trees in the title, following The Hidden Life of Trees and The Word for World Is Forest!

That quote is quite revealing. He does use stereotypes of Black people (oh Lawd! Lawdy Lawdy Lawd!) when describing the words and behavior of Whites in Money. It reminds me of Flannery O'Connor's satire. But her's, IMHO, is much better and funnier than Everett's. In Trees, the satire of dumb whites is, for me, by far the weakest part of the book. It's too easy. It's punching down. I don't get any sense that he knows these people, like O'Connor knows her characters, who were always more than just dumb/ignorant.
That being said, there are passages where the stereotypes fall away, if only briefly, and Everett shows us a real person. The passage where Charlene muses about her dead husband, Wheat: She wonders if he was gay, and almost wishes he had been, because that would've made him more interesting. She's so desperate to find something remarkable in this dull, lazy human with whom she shared her bed. By the end of her musings she realizes she'd been praying (though she doesn't know when, during her thoughts, she started).
And Money isn't named after currency, as Everett implies at the beginning of the novel, but after Hernando DeSoto Money, from a real ritzy planter family and named after the Spanish explorer. Money was a US Senator from 1897 to 1911. I assume his family must have owned a plantation in the immediate area of the Money community. Money was like many other Delta crossroads, a few stores, a post office, etc. that serviced the surrounding plantations (but not the planter families themselves, they'd go to Memphis for their shopping).
Interesting about the origin of the Money name and community. I accepted this as the satire it was meant to be, and could see Everett getting a lot of pleasure from writing it. I certainly took a great deal of pleasure in reading it.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Try this link. Once there the one comment is a link to atomic family but if you stay with the comments it should be final Trees comments.
Try this link. Once there the one comment is a link to atomic family but if you stay with the comments it should be final Trees comments.
That’s weird bc when I click on it the heading says final impressions for Trees. Other than Tom’s one comment which does link you to Atomic. But I’m also using phone app which of course has its own challenges.

I suppose it's this one?
Sorry folks. I posted the link to Atomic Family by error. That has been corrected. You can access the link normally now.
I'm also including the link here.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I'm also including the link here.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Books mentioned in this topic
Erasure (other topics)The Word for World Is Forest (other topics)
The Trees (other topics)
The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World (other topics)
James (other topics)