I do like reading books that are a little out of my target zone now and then, and this one was a stretch.
This is a coming-of-age story, of a 15 year old girl, Mattie Watson, in rural North Carolina in 1940.
When the story begins, Mattie’s life isn’t perfect, but it’s reliable. She lives with her mother and father, on their farm, with her 10 year old brother, Joey, and her older brother Danny, in his last year of high school.
The Watson farm is healthy and productive, and Mattie’s parents provide solid guidance and wisdom. Mattie’s best friend, Lynette Johnson, lives on a tenant farm, owned by Mattie’s parents.
Lynette isn’t so lucky as Mattie. Her father, “Mr. Johnson,” is a hard drinker, a lazy farmer, and an abusive husband and father — “mean as a snake.” You know that’s not going to be good. Her mom does her dwindling best to look after Lynette and her two younger sisters.
And there is Rose, in many ways as good a friend to Mattie as Lynette. Rose though, in 1940 rural North Carolina, lives in a parallel African American world. But her relationship with Mattie is as important to Mattie's coming-of-age as any other in the story.
The plot's catalyst is The Kudzu King, James Cullowee. He arrives in the town of Pinesboro to exalt the virtues of the “miracle crop.” It’s cattle feed, ground cover, soil replenisher, . . . you can eat it, you can smoke it, you can probably drink it. And it pretty much grows itself, rain or shine.
Cullowee is a young man on the make, and we know it, even if Mattie, her brother Danny, and many others in Pinesboro don’t.
He organizes meetings, events, a demonstration field (at the Johnson farm), and a Kudzu Queen pageant, at which Mattie and her high school peers, including Lynette, will be contestants.
Cullowee is a predator. As readers, we are just watching how and when, and on whom, he feeds.
The first actual dark notes don’t sound until about 100 pages into the story. Mimi Herman takes pains to set this up, even while we know at least the kind of thing that’s coming.
Mattie is attracted to Cullowee. He’s a strong presence, a “man” in the preferred sense, by distinction from, among others, Carl Davis, a high school boy who takes Mattie on her first date.
All of this setting for coming-of-age also has its place within a greater coming-of-age and loss of innocence that World War II is about to bring to Pinesboro. Danny’s generation is going to fight this war.
Mattie is going to grow up fast. That’s all I’m going to say to avoid spoilers. The climax, at the Kudzu Queen pageant, is “fantastic,” in the literal sense that leans on the word’s affinity with fantasy.
But it is satisfying, more satisfying than realistic. So you (I) root for it and applaud it. And you root for Mattie, for Lynette, Danny, and all of them.
I enjoyed reading the book — it moves, and it has direction. Like I said, it’s not in my target zone, but it was enlightening to spend some time in its own zone.
And, by the way, watch for the cameo by a youngish state judge (“a country lawyer”), Sam Ervin, later of Watergate fame.