Ell
Well-Known Member
* Spoiler Alert*
Don't expect to be entertained and uplifted by reading "Bastard Out of Carolina". Thought-provoking, intense, controversial, uncomfortable - yes. Entertaining - no.
The Boatwright family epitomizes the stereotypical image of the term "white-trash". The brothers drink, brawl, and land in jail. The women marry young, have lots of babies, and are old before their time. Yet they have a close bond with each other and are fiercely loyal to their own.
Anney Boatwright is the youngest sister. She becomes pregnant at age 15 and has a daughter, nicknamed Bone. However, Bone's birth certificate states she is "illegitimate" because Anney refuses to name the father. Somehow this is too humiliating, even for the Boatwright clan and Anney vainly tries to have the word deleted from Bone's birth certificate year after year.
Eventually, Anney falls in love, marries, and has a second daughter, Reese. But just as Anney thinks her life is settled, Reese's father dies. This is where the real story begins. Enter Glenn, from an affluent, successful, southern family who is a total failure in the eyes of his family. He becomes Daddy Glenn to Reese and Bone when Anney agrees to marry him. What follows is the story of Bone and the all-too-real saga of child and sexual abuse.
The ending is unresolved, but realistic - real life usually can't be wrapped up in a few pages to produce a fairy tale ending. In comments I've read from other readers, this seems to be the most problematic part of the book for them - i.e. after suffering through an entire book of unremitting ugliness, there is no "feel-good" wrap up, no heart-warming pay-off. If that's what you're after when you read, then this is not the book for you.
I wasn't bothered by the ending. The reality is that there are many Bones and Anneys in the world. Some manage to make the right choices and move on to a better life and others seem destined to repeat past wrongs. If you believe that sometimes looking at the ugly side of life gives you a better understanding of humanity and that books aren't always about entertainment, then give "Bastard Out of Carolina" a try.
- April, 2002.
From Ell's Reviews
Don't expect to be entertained and uplifted by reading "Bastard Out of Carolina". Thought-provoking, intense, controversial, uncomfortable - yes. Entertaining - no.
The Boatwright family epitomizes the stereotypical image of the term "white-trash". The brothers drink, brawl, and land in jail. The women marry young, have lots of babies, and are old before their time. Yet they have a close bond with each other and are fiercely loyal to their own.
Anney Boatwright is the youngest sister. She becomes pregnant at age 15 and has a daughter, nicknamed Bone. However, Bone's birth certificate states she is "illegitimate" because Anney refuses to name the father. Somehow this is too humiliating, even for the Boatwright clan and Anney vainly tries to have the word deleted from Bone's birth certificate year after year.
Eventually, Anney falls in love, marries, and has a second daughter, Reese. But just as Anney thinks her life is settled, Reese's father dies. This is where the real story begins. Enter Glenn, from an affluent, successful, southern family who is a total failure in the eyes of his family. He becomes Daddy Glenn to Reese and Bone when Anney agrees to marry him. What follows is the story of Bone and the all-too-real saga of child and sexual abuse.
The ending is unresolved, but realistic - real life usually can't be wrapped up in a few pages to produce a fairy tale ending. In comments I've read from other readers, this seems to be the most problematic part of the book for them - i.e. after suffering through an entire book of unremitting ugliness, there is no "feel-good" wrap up, no heart-warming pay-off. If that's what you're after when you read, then this is not the book for you.
I wasn't bothered by the ending. The reality is that there are many Bones and Anneys in the world. Some manage to make the right choices and move on to a better life and others seem destined to repeat past wrongs. If you believe that sometimes looking at the ugly side of life gives you a better understanding of humanity and that books aren't always about entertainment, then give "Bastard Out of Carolina" a try.
- April, 2002.
From Ell's Reviews