I have to give this a five star review because Carolyn Chute may be one of the most misunderstood but brilliant authors I have read recently.
"Letourneau's Used Auto Parts" is Chute's second novel, after her successful first outing, "The Beans of Egypt, Maine," which had her touring the country as a "specimen," as she told Sandy Phippen in an interview in the early 2000s. You see, Carolyn Chute is completely unpretentious, completely authentic, and completely honest to her working class roots, which has led many to wonder over the years how she can possibly write so well (an insulting notion of course), and that she must somehow be "phony."
Not so.
Chute knows Maine, and I don't mean the Maine of "The Way Life Should Be", slogans, which apply to the tourists coming in on the coast and dropping their money around. She knows the Maine that I have seen much of my life--- she knows the poverty, and the rage and desperation that comes with it. She knows the people who work hour after hour, breaking their bodies and their minds and never getting ahead. The people who see the government as the enemy because the government sure isn't helping them any.
And this book, which I think is even better than "The Beans," is another beautiful display of her knowledge of the working class and poverty, the way they work, the way they play, the way they have sex and make babies and just keep going in a world they feel couldn't care less about them.
Chute is an author who focuses on character over all else, and she draws them here with haunting, minimalist strokes, in episodic short chapters. There's Junie, who we meet at 15, who wants nothing ore than to save up money for a cool sports car. There's Crowe Bovey, who is cheating on his wife as she dies in a house fire right at the beginning of the novel (this is not a spoiler, it is the first few pages), and spends most of the novel as a "slave" for Big Lucien, who owns Letourneau's Auto Parts. There's Little Lucien, truant from school to work in the woods with his older brother Norman, and E. Blackstone Babbidge, a "Godly" man who also works for Big Lucien and has just married Junie's mother, Lillian (or Lily-ann as she is called).
And of course, there are the many, many women that Big Lucien has married, had affairs with, and sired children with. This seems to be something he cannot keep from doing. And he houses many of these exes, their children, and his employees on land he owns called "Miracle City", a collection of old trailers, that the selectman and code man want to get rid of somehow.
Big Lucien is rarely seen in the book--- he is talked about--- and is an almost mythical figure. They talk about his "heart of gold" and his terrible headaches that will lead to screaming... and, of course, his many, many children.
I don't want to overstate this, but, in truth, if Democrats want to understand why they aren't winning the working class, they would be wise to read some Carolyn Chute and take some copious notes.