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Tobacco Road
by Erskine Caldwell
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Read in August, 2005
In 1998, the Modern Library released a list of the 100 Best American Novels to much acclaim and much derision. Randian poltroons and sci-fi nerds and feminists and African-Americans and librarians and English majors and everyone but my mom whipped up a complaint about the list’s validity, but I was enchanted. I love lists; I love year-end best-of lists; I love lists by the famous and infamous; I love supposedly impartial lists; and I love self-improvement reading lists. With books, I tend to t...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
readers who can handle repetitive narrative
the story is simple: family lives on failed tenant farm, hungry, tired, and sick of each other to no end. some of the family members are disfigured, others refuse to talk and those one's who do talk never shut up. any opportunity that comes along with a chance for escape (automobile, aging widow, etc.) they latch on to. this is a book that arrived in the early years of the depression, and speaks of authenticity like few other books of the period.
I found the narrative to be rather minimal in...more
I found the narrative to be rather minimal in...more
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Read in October, 2007
I wasn't sure whether to laugh or cry for this family of beyond-dirt-poor, ignorant, Georgian farmers who only know how to do one thing well--fornicate. Jeeter Lester (who gets my vote for the laziest man in literature) and his wife, Ada have 12 surviving children, including a 12 year-old daughter who has recently been married off to the neighbor (who is puzzled about what to do because she won't sleep with him). Only two are still home when the story opens, 16-year old Dude and 18-year old Elli...more
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highly-recommended
recommends it for: people who love smut!
Read in January, 1998
recommended to Samantha by:
my grandmarecommends it for: people who love smut!
If you love Jerry Spinger... this book is too twisted! Perhaps you may understand it better if you actually grew up (and still live in) the Redneck Riviera. When you know people you suspect may actually be this way, it adds a whole new dimension to the scenario.
Travel back in time with me... to The Great Depression... to Georgia... to a wonderful little time in American history when you could sell your daughter off for sex in exchange for a bag of turnips and then sneak off and eat every on...more
Travel back in time with me... to The Great Depression... to Georgia... to a wonderful little time in American history when you could sell your daughter off for sex in exchange for a bag of turnips and then sneak off and eat every on...more
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Troubling, nauseating book. However, I can see why some people enjoy it, Caldwell has a very dark sense of humor. Plus there's some difficult truth in the plight of these poor ignorant sharecroppers if you can see past the complete absurdity and grotesque sexuality in their story. My professor taught this book in connection with the Great Gatsby. He described the main character as a "redneck Gatsby" and he pointed out that while Gatsby exhibits a tragic flaw in his love for Daisy, Lest...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to Melissa by:
Book Clubrecommends it for: No one
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
Northerners who like to look down on Southerners ;)
Enjoyed reading this story. Clearly there is something wrong with me since I enjoy reading simple tales of the poor and downtrodden.
Not much to say 'cept this is a story of a sad man and his family and a bit of their lives on a worn out tobacco farm in the early 1900s in rural Georgia. The seriousness of their condition is described through a funny story involving a sack of turnips in the opening pages. The pace never slows and the shock of how desperate people live never wears off until ...more
Not much to say 'cept this is a story of a sad man and his family and a bit of their lives on a worn out tobacco farm in the early 1900s in rural Georgia. The seriousness of their condition is described through a funny story involving a sack of turnips in the opening pages. The pace never slows and the shock of how desperate people live never wears off until ...more
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Read in November, 2005
i know this is on the modern library's best 100 list, but i found it simply disturbing. it seems like we were meant to laugh at the horrible people doing stupid things and making disastrous decisions, but what's the fun in that? why write a book of it?
on a good note, the character of ellie mae had captivating imagery. her blazing red split lip, pouring from her nostril; her always peering out from behind one or another chinaberry tree like some wild creature. the book isn't worth reading for ...more
on a good note, the character of ellie mae had captivating imagery. her blazing red split lip, pouring from her nostril; her always peering out from behind one or another chinaberry tree like some wild creature. the book isn't worth reading for ...more
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Read in January, 2008
I thought this book was about ACC basketball, boy was I wrong... In this tale of the immediate post-depression deep south the author vividly illustrates his "experiences" of idiocy and depravity in the remaining southern agrarian class. He is relentless in his critique from start to finish, and I felt it was so unremitting that the argument actually lost most of its strength by the end as it transitioned from historical recounting to complete fiction.
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
high school and up
Make this one of those books you pick up once each week for only 30 minutes or so. The monotony is difficult to handle in large chunks of time, but the story is, in fact enjoyable to think about once you've finished. This fiction work really expresses an alternative reality to our normal thoughts of poor southern farmers.
Fight your way through it; it is worth having been read.
Fight your way through it; it is worth having been read.
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Read in July, 2006
A fearful portrait of poor whites in Georgia. I can imagine that some readers were upset with this book. Lester Jeter is pretty dispicable. Poor children, no wonder they left and never came back. Ellie Mae with her cleft lip. Bessie the preacher. . .I didn't like her at all. Seemed apropos that they would die the way they did. What a sad life for Ada. A strong, emotional read.
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Read in July, 2008
At first I felt bad for the Lester family for being so poor. Than I was angry with them for being too lazy and stubborn to do anything about their situation. Somewhere towards the end I just accepted it.
On a side note, having 6 people fight over a bag of turnips made me feel less bad about today's economy :)
On a side note, having 6 people fight over a bag of turnips made me feel less bad about today's economy :)
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Read in January, 1999
recommends it for:
People who enjoy Southern United States fiction.
This book has a lot of quirky elements, but really gets to the heart of poor people in the South as well as provides a unique glimpse into their outlooks on life--not that all poor people are the same...!!This particular family gives an iteresting snapshot into early 1900s very poor, isolated southern families.
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I dare you to read this book and not laugh out loud. A very accurate, funny, depressing depiction of poor white trash in depression era Georgia. The only reason Caldwell wasn't murdered by an angry mob of Georgians was because he was from Georgia. Even so he had to move to Maine.
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همراه جاده ی تنباکو (خیال می کنم این اثر به فارسی ترجمه شده باشد) انگار یک دور تاریخ و جغرافیایی منطقه را هم مرور می کنی، انگار آمریکا را از نزدیک می شناسی، ...
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Read in January, 2008
I read this book for a class and in all fairness, I missed the class discussion. But I can hardly believe that anyone could write a novel so totally devoid of any positive human characteristics. The characters are all despicable. I was glad to see the end of them!
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Read in August, 2007
Set in the depression, written in the 30s, a yokel family get a car and have adventures. A 12 year old is forced into marriage and doesn't want to 'do it'. They all repeat the same things about 15 times. It was pretty entertaning and read like a play but nyeh
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Read in February, 2007
recommends it for:
hillbilly haters.
This may be the most mean-spirited novel I've ever read. Compared to this, Lewis's Main Street looks like a love letter to the provinces. I think the original title of this book was "Yokels. What a Bunch of Retards." That being said, I liked it.
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I am currently on an Erskine Caldwell binge. I love his descriptions of life in the South during the depression era. This particular edition also has wonderful photographs taken of the people during that time by Margret Bourke-White.
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Read in February, 2008
The characters in Tobacco Road are probably the most frustrating I have encountered since "Sophie's choice" (read: well-written). The combination of ignorance/stubbornness lends itself to tragically comical situations.
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