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Clear Springs

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this superb memoir, the bestselling author of In Country and other award-winning books tells her own story, and the story of a Kentucky farm family, the Masons of Clear Springs. Like Russell Baker's Growing Up, Jill Ker Conway's The Road from Coorain, and other classic literary memoirs, Clear Springs takes us back in time to recapture a way of life that has all but disappeared, a country culture deeply rooted in work and food and family, in common sense and music and the land. Clear Springs is also an American woman's odyssey, exploring how a misfit girl who dreamed of distant places grew up in the forties, fifties, and sixties, and fulfilled her ambition to be a writer.
        
A multilayered narrative of three generations—Bobbie Ann Mason, her parents and grandparents—Clear Springs gracefully interlaces several different lives, decades, and locales, moving from the industrious life on a Kentucky farm to travels around the South with Mason as president of the Hilltoppers Fan Club; from the hippie lifestyle of the 1960s New York counterculture to the shock-therapy ward of a mental institution; from a farmhouse to the set of a Hollywood movie; from pop music concerts to a small rustic schoolhouse. Clear Springs depicts the changes that have come to family, to women, and to heartland America in the twentieth century, as well as to Bobbie Ann Mason herself. When the movie of Mason's bestselling novel In Country is filmed near Clear Springs, it brings the first limousines to town, even as it brings out once again the wisdom and values of Mason's remarkable parents. Her mother,  especially, stands at the center of this book. Mason's journey leads her to a recognition of the drama and significance of her mother's life and to a new understanding of heritage, place, and family roots.
        
Brilliant and evocative, Clear Springs is a stunning achievement.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 29, 1999
      Readers of Mason's fiction may have wondered whether the white, working class, small-town Kentucky she depicts is real or "made up." This memoir makes clear that her work is deeply rooted in her own experience. When Mason first left Clear Springs to attend college, she felt ashamed of being from the South, fearing that people might see her as "a walking, mute mannequin of Southern Gothic horror in high heels and a beehive--or worse, a baton twirler with a police dog." Gradually, she learned to accept her roots; this book is a loving embrace of that place and its people and a richly textured portrait of a rapidly disappearing way of life. However, those looking for deep psychological insight will not find it here. Nor will this memoir make Mason's family stop speaking to her: her attitude is that of an appreciative and respectful daughter. Although not all the characters are angelic, she finds reasons, if not justification, for even the alternately weak and controlling behavior of the mother-in-law who nearly ruined her beloved mother's life. In the first half of the book, Mason uses luxurious, larruping (Kentuckian for good enough to eat) language to evoke the sounds, taste, smells and sights of early childhood. In the second, weaker part, Mason helps her aging mother, Christy, move off the family farm into town, asks her questions and listens to her silences, hints and memories, out of which Mason constructs a version of how her mother, grandmother and great grandparents may have experienced various events in their lives. The resulting narrative, a somewhat tentative mixture of fiction and social history, is still compelling, but the prose never quite gels. Though Mason's strong grounding makes this memoir absorbing, it also prevents it from taking off in a risky, free-floating flight.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 1999
      Why the noted author left Clear Springs, KY--and why she returned.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 1999
      For readers with a taste for the high triumphs and the high--preferably scandal-choked--tragedies of American life, Mason's memoir may not do. For others, though, it should prove to be a worthy read. Mason's life does offer some familiar plotlines, such as the country-to-city tale: the move from a relatively uneducated, relatively poor, very small town in Kentucky to one of the largest and most cosmopolitan locales on the planet, New York City. And she does end with a return home, triumphant, if you will, insofar as the movie version of her successful novel is premiering. But Mason reveals ambivalence toward what the intervening years have done for her town, noting, among other things, that the chicken-processing plant's architecture seems unrelievedly functional. Like the best of memorirists, Mason does not attempt to close all circles or to separate out the good and the bad; she poses questions that linger. As she rediscovers back in Clear Springs what it was like to be immersed in the strange particulars of nature, she wonders why nature wasn't ultimately satisfying, why she lost interest in it. Elsewhere, she wonders why her mother never left. And as she reflects on her parents' concern with working the farm in the years ahead and their undoubted frustration with having a girl, she wonders, Were they so hopeful of a son they hadn't even thought of a girl's name? ((Reviewed March 1, 1999))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1999, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 1999
      Best known for her novel In Country (LJ 10/1/85), Mason here delves into her family background and childhood as a way of finding patterns and connectedness in life. She recalls the experience of growing up on a farm in Clear Springs, KY, in the 1940s and 1950s, occasionally alluding to the general prejudices against "country people" vs. city dwellers. The most poignant aspect of this memoir is the material Mason elicits from family members, especially her mother, who responds at times with "Oh, you're straining my little watery brain!" Mason concludes the memoir, which centers around her mother (orphaned at age four), with a memorable chapter about an experience that ultimately demonstrates the persistence, endurance, and perseverance of her mother even after 77 years. Mason proudly and vividly portrays incidents and individuals in a way that makes the reader feel like a witness and an acquaintance.--Jeris Cassel, Rutgers Univ. Libs., New Brunswick, NJ

      Copyright 1999 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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