Many of the twenty-three stories included in Bayou Folk (1894) are set in the Cane River country of Louisiana where Chopin herself lived for several years. In these stories her characters challenge the limits of their socioeconomic station and rebel against the social mores of their times. While this collection earned Chopin praise, her acclaim diminished within her lifetime as she more frequently turned to subject matter that critics considered scandalous. All but four of the stories collected in this volume had been published previously.
Kate Chopin was an American author whose fiction grew out of the complex cultures and contradictions of Louisiana life, and she gradually became one of the most distinctive voices in nineteenth century literature. Raised in a household shaped by strong women of French and Irish heritage, she developed an early love for books and storytelling, and that immersion in language later shaped the quiet precision of her prose. After marrying and moving to New Orleans, then later to the small community of Cloutierville, she absorbed the rhythms, customs, and tensions of Creole and Cajun society, finding in its people the material that would feed both her sympathy and her sharp observational eye. When personal loss left her searching for direction, she began writing with the encouragement of a family friend, discovering not only a therapeutic outlet but a genuine vocation. Within a few years, her stories appeared in major magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, Vogue, and The Century, where readers encountered her local-color sketches, her portrayals of women navigating desire and constraint, and her nuanced depictions of life in the American South. She published two story collections, Bayou Folk and A Night in Acadie, introducing characters whose emotional lives were depicted with unusual honesty. Her short fiction often explored subjects others avoided, including interracial relationships, female autonomy, and the quiet but powerful inner conflicts of everyday people. That same unflinching quality shaped The Awakening, the novel that would later become her most celebrated work. At the time of its publication, however, its frank treatment of a married woman’s emotional and sensual awakening unsettled many critics, who judged it harshly, yet Chopin continued to write stories that revealed her commitment to portraying women as fully human, with desires and ambitions that stretched beyond the confines of convention. She admired the psychological clarity of Guy de Maupassant, but she pushed beyond his influence to craft a voice that was unmistakably her own, direct yet lyrical, and deeply attuned to the inner lives of her characters. Though some of her contemporaries viewed her themes as daring or even improper, others recognized her narrative skill, and within a decade of her passing she was already being described as a writer of remarkable talent. Her rediscovery in the twentieth century led readers to appreciate how modern her concerns truly were: the struggle for selfhood, the tension between social expectations and private longing, and the resilience of women seeking lives that felt authentically theirs. Today, her stories and novels are widely read, admired for their clarity, emotional intelligence, and the boldness with which they illuminate the complexities of human experience.
A No-Account Creole - 4 Stars In and out of Old Natchitoches - 3 Stars In Sabine - 4.5 Stars A Very Fine Fiddle - 3 Stars Beyond the Bayou - 3 Stars Old Aunt Peggy - 3 Stars The Return of Alcibiade - 4 Stars A Rude Awakening - 4 Stars The Benitous' Slave - 3.5 Stars Desiree's Baby - 5 Stars A Turkey Hunt - 3 Stars Madame Celestin's Divorce - 4 Stars Love on the Bon-Dieu - 4.5 Stars Loka - 3.5 Stars Boulot and Boulotte - 2.5 Stars For Marse Chouchoute - 4 Stars A Visit to Avoyelles - 3 Stars A Wizard from Gettysburg - 4.5 Stars Ma'am E Pelagie - 4.5 Stars At the 'Cadian Ball - 3 Stars La Belle Zoraide - 3.5 Stars A Gentleman of Bayou Teche - 5 Stars A Lady of Bayou St. John - 3 Stars
Bayou Folk (1894) is a collection of 23 short stories that tell of life in 19th century Louisiana – on the bayou, in small towns, plantations, and New Orleans. It’s a kaleidoscope of locations, types of stories, and races of characters – whites, Creoles, Acadians, ‘Negros’, and ‘Mulattoes’ are all mixed together here. Most are poor and many are illiterate. The stories take place mostly after the Civil War, but I found the strongest three to be set before (or during) it:
‘Desiree’s Baby’ – probably her best in this collection, it deals with mixed-race children, with a surprise ending which subtly questions the feelings of racial superiority.
‘La Belle Zoraide’ - about the cruelty of slaveholders in trying to arrange a marriage between a creole beauty and a mulatto she doesn’t love.
‘A Lady of Bayou St. John’ - about a young married woman in a lonely marriage who because attracted to another man, believes she will go “anywhere, anywhere” with him, but finds her heart changes after her husband is killed in the war. There is a great quote from this one: “That mysterious, that treacherous bond called sympathy, had revealed them to each other.”
Overall the stories are a little uneven in terms of emotional impact, and her other collections are stronger, but these clearly show her promise as an author and you could do worse. Chopin sought first and foremost to portray truth, like one of her literary heroes Guy de Maupassant, and in that she was successful. Because of the themes of poor folk in the country living in a stratified society, I was also reminded of Turgenev’s ‘Sketches From a Hunter’s Album’.
Kate's writing is interesting. The dialogue is very colloquial which I enjoyed. I've read other short stories by her I enjoyed more. The Bayou Folk stories seemed random and mostly anecdotal. I thought they offered an intriguing glimpse of 19th Century America.
An intriguing look at 19th century America and Louisiana in particular, around the time of the Civil War. There is a diverse array of characters from Louisiana's diverse populace, both before and after the war. Some of the stories are straightforward romances, some satires on contemporary society, and glimpses of life in that period, and many abound with clever plot twists. Chopin's writing style is rich and languid, as befits the 'bayou' in the title, and reaches its peak towards the end of this collection. It is frequently mixed with the French and English dialects of the region and is written in a colloquial style. There are interesting observations and critiques of the racial laws of the period, and the injunctions against intermarriage between different communities. However, there are too stories which seem to stereotype African-Americans, as in the one where a freed slave remains back to serve his master. Chopin's radical views on women's liberation from 'The Awakening' too seem to be muted, if not totally absent from this volume. There is a pervasive air of sentimentalism too, and the presence of local colour is mixed with an interesting critique of it in 'A Gentleman of Bayou Teche'.
Favourites: Desirees Baby Love on the Bon-Dieu Ma'ame Pelagie At the 'Cadian Ball La Belle Zoraide
I was fascinated by this collection of short stories set in Louisiana after the Civil War. I've never been to Louisiana, and obviously I wasn't around in that time period but Chopin makes it seem so real. The stories feature an intriguing mix of characters, both English- and French-speaking, and every shade of colour from white to black. I say "stories" but some of them are really more like vignettes, they give you a picture but no real plot.
We see things from several different viewpoints, from the Easterner come to check on a plantation his employer has acquired due to bankruptcy to aristocrats with no money, plantation owners with lots of money, young lovers, old matrons, duellers, fiddlers...
Perfect reading for the hammock on a hot and humid day, where you can imagine you're on the gallery of one of the big homes, with the bayou in view.
A wide ranging collection, from classics like "Desiree's Baby" to nostalgic plantation fiction tales to humorous sketches to short romances. It contains both "local color" and, in "A Gentleman of Bayou Teche" in particular, its critique. Many echo each other: part of the greatness of "A Visit to Avoyelles" is that it initially suggests it will be a repeat of "In Sabine" but amounts to its opposite ("Madame Celestin's Divorce" might also be said to echo "In Sabine," but for the purpose of parody).
I love Kate Chopin. She was a century ahead of her time. This edition has versions of the short stories "translated" into modern English, including the parts originally in French. The originals are in appendixes.
This was an depth feeling for the natural way of life in several southern communities it was enjoyable read. Folk tales are part of the literary experience .
This book swept me away to this other wonderful world. The setting was brilliantly set. I could totally see it in my mind. But the characters were definitely my favorite part. They are all so colorful, interesting, exciting, and hilarious. The main character is just perfect. The plot moved fast enough that I couldn't stop reading lest I miss something, but the author still took the time to flesh out the details. The details are what really make or break a story.
Interesting short stories with interesting and divers characters. But i didn't care much for the colloquial language in the conversations. My head began to ache trying to understand them! Here is an example: "I wants 'im to come in heah an' say: 'Howdy, Aunt Dicey! will you be so kine and go put on yo' noo calker dress an' yo' bonnit w'at you w'ars to meetin', an' stan' 'side f'om dat i'onin'-boa'd w'ilse I gwine take yo' photygraph.' Dat de way fo' a boy to talk w'at had good raisin'."
Read this for a class. The way Chopin writes is so charming I couldn’t help but enjoy even the more slower-paced stories. She writes humanity in such a way that it felt like a relative telling old tales. I quite enjoyed this collection.