I’ve just finished a couple of Stephen Crane novels:
I’m new to Crane (1871–1900), but I’ll
read more of his work if I can get hold of it. He was a fine writer who died
from tuberculosis at the age 28 – a great loss.
Maggie is quite
short – more a novella than a novel and Crane’s first book published at his own
expense when he was only 21 years old. It’s an extraordinarily powerful story
of squalor and poverty in the Bowery district of New York. Maggie herself grows
up in the middle of it, the pretty daughter of drunken, fighting parents and
sister to Jimmie who grows up to become a stupid, cynical product of the slums.
The girl seemed to
awaken. "Jimmie--" He drew hastily back from her. "Well, now,
yer a hell of a t'ing, ain' yeh?" he said, his lips curling in scorn.
Radiant virtue sat upon his brow and his repelling hands expressed horror of
contamination. Maggie turned and went. The crowd at the door fell back
precipitately. A baby falling down in front of the door, wrenched a scream like
a wounded animal from its mother. Another woman sprang forward and picked it
up, with a chivalrous air, as if rescuing a human being from an oncoming
express train.
But there is to be no fairy tale ending for Maggie, who
hardly figures in the book really. It just revolves around here like an
all-enveloping miasma of mean and hopeless squalor written in such a way that
you know there is no way out. Maggie is to be no Cinderella and eventually
resorts to prostitution before she dies an obscure and soon forgotten death.
The Red Badge of
Courage is quite short too - a powerful descriptive novel of the American Civil War. It
follows the experiences of Henry Fleming, a young and naive volunteer.
His emaciated regiment
bustled forth with undiminished fierceness when its time came. When assaulted
again by bullets, the men burst out in a barbaric cry of rage and pain. They
bent their heads in aims of intent hatred behind the projected hammers of their
guns. Their ramrods clanged loud with fury as their eager arms pounded the
cartridges into the rifle barrels. The front of the regiment was a smoke-wall
penetrated by the flashing points of yellow and red...
The regiment bled
extravagantly. Grunting bundles of blue began to drop. The orderly sergeant of
the youth's company was shot through the cheeks. Its supports being injured,
his jaw hung afar down, disclosing in the wide cavern of his mouth a pulsing
mass of blood and teeth. And with it all he made attempts to cry out. In his endeavour
there was a dreadful earnestness, as if he conceived that one great shriek
would make him well...
Later he began to
study his deeds, his failures, and his achievements. Thus, fresh from scenes
where many of his usual machines of reflection had been idle, from where he had
proceeded sheeplike, he struggled to marshal all his acts.
The books avoids names to create a strange, inhuman effect. Even Henry is
almost always referred to as the youth. It works well in conveying the dehumanizing aspect of real war. The ugly,
confused stupidity of it. The accidental heroes, of which Henry becomes one and
the accidental victims soon forgotten. Just like poor, pretty Maggie.
5 comments:
Just for a second I thought that was Gregory Peck!
But there is to be no fairy tale ending for Maggie, who hardly figures in the book really.
You've missed your calling, AKH. Book reviews for you, like a literary Roger Ebert.
David - he reminds me a Wyatt Earp.
James - as long as I don't have to look like him (:
He reminds me of a rather more robust Robert Louis Stevenson.
I read the "Red Badge..." many years ago. I can remember very little - it is now filed under "good, but forgotten".
Sam - it is good, but a little depressing too.
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