On a messy, compelling novel that’s got it all, and then some.
Elizabeth Stoddard’s multi-generational family novel slash bildungsroman
slash New England regionalist fiction slash gothic The
Morgesons (1862) features a more self-aware and –critical narrator/protagonist
than Jane Eyre, a rebellious sister
who might be possessed by the devil, two brothers/romantic leads with substance
abuse and anger management issues respectively, an adulterous and
semi-incestuous affair that ends in a shocking carriage accident, more rich and
complex female characters than most of the rest of the decade’s novels combined,
allusions to everything from Arctic adventure chronicles to sea shanties, and a
scene where our heroine quite literally communes with the spirit of the ocean.
No, I’m not making any of that up.
So why isn’t Stoddard’s novel, which is not like any other 19th
century American work (to say the least), more well-known? It’s not an easy
read, but we’re talking mid-19th century, and it’s certainly a lot
more consistently accessible than the far more famous Moby Dick. It was written and published during the Civil War, however,
and so perhaps has been overshadowed in our collective memories by the era’s
more significant historical events, as well as by a novel like Uncle Tom’s Cabin that connects directly
to those events. It’s also, and I would argue even more crucially, big and
messy, and so suffers in comparison to a brilliantly structured, far more
high-school-teachable contemporary classic like The Scarlet Letter. In short, some of the very things that make
Stoddard’s novel so full and compelling make it hard to wrap our heads around—and
we’re big on sound bite descriptions for our famous works, I’d say.
I’m not going to argue that The
Morgesons should become a high school American literature standby, although
I have taught it successfully in a couple past sections of a pre-1950 American
novel course (and wrote my own favorite college paper on it to boot). But if
you’re a fan of the Bronte sisters, of the gothic, of unique narrative voices,
of New England’s deep-rooted families and historic houses and rocky beaches, or
of books that just plain surprise you at every turn, I can’t recommend Stoddard’s
novel highly enough. If you fit any of those demographics (and who among us doesn’t
fit at least one?!), lend Cassandra Morgeson your ear, and you won’t be
disappointed.
Next writer and work tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Other under-read writers or works you’d share?
You are undoubtedly sick of hearing me say her name but Zora Neale Hurston does not get enough attention! And even when she does it's as though she only wrote ONE bloody book. She's a powerful, driven, gorgeous, fabulous, crazy woman/historian/author/anthropologist/genius.
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but I'd also like a revival of Shirley Jackson!
Oh, oops, sorry those are NEITHER NE women. My bad. Nevermind.
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Hi Anne,
ReplyDeleteShirley Jackson lived in Vermont for much of her adult life, and died there, so I think she qualifies!
But of course the week's series is only one focus, and I agree about ZNH as well.
Thanks,
Ben
Yeah! For some reason I always get it in my head that Jackson was from California...IDK. My students always love (or they tolerate) _We have always lived in the castle_ which I hold as my all-time favourite book. So hooray, only half wrong!
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