The Last of How It Was is the best book I almost never read.
I grew up lollygagging in living rooms and kitchens listening to family gossip, soap operas and grapevine news flashes. Keeping a low profile and an open ear was the pipeline to all the best information the world had to offer, courtesy of my mother and aunts.
So too, does Pearson’s fictional Louis Benfield, gain his education in the Last of How It Was. A rambling tale of a fictitious Southern family, chock full of strange yet loveable characters, it tells stories of a better, gentler time, from a South I never visited but feel right at home in thanks to the author’s wonderful ear for dialect and eye for detail.
T.R. Pearson weaves a rich tale; only it isn’t simply one tale. It’s story spun off of story spun off of story in the best of family-storytelling styles. Each hilarious character and their story, only puts the storyteller (various elder members of Louis Benfield’s family) in mind of another even more outrageous character with all of their eccentric essential details, which leads to another and another and…
It’s laugh-out-loud funny. It’s Pearson having a summit meeting with William Falkner, the Beverly Hillbillies, and Mark Twain. It’s the funniest book I ever read.
In at least two places, I literally laughed until I cried when I tried to read it out loud to someone.
But it is not a read for the faint of heart. It takes some tenacity to take on the flow and rhythm of the dialog and setting. It is in fact, confusing at first as the reader is plunged into Deep Southern dialog and rambling monologue, with no good explanation offered as to what is going on, or why.
I almost gave up; I almost put it down, more than once. For some reason, I kept wading through the characters; the rich, fat, juicy descriptions; and the personal histories of people and mules alike and was rewarded. It happened somewhere between pages 40-65, and after that I was hooked.
Hang in there until page 65, and enjoy all the wisdom, adventures, and foibles of the Benfield family and all of their charming southern-fried acquaintances. You will be very glad you did.