Synopses & Reviews
Review
"Mary Lee Settle begins her memoir with the observation that 'An autobiography that begins at one's birth begins too late, sometimes in the middle of the story, sometimes at the end.' In Addie, she moves backward from a summer day in her grandmother's hammock to the history of the Kanawha Valley of West Virginia and forward again, encompassing old love stories and racial strife and Indian wars, to show the way this place—its mining booms and busts, its rivers and mountains—shaped her family's story and, in turn, her own. 'All memories are real,' she writes. 'Of course they are, like dreams are real, like old wounds that insist until they heal and leave a twinge of memory in the scars.' The memoir focuses on Settle's grandmother, Addie, and it is written in rich, compelling prose that, like the best of novels, leaves you with the sense that through Addie's life and an understanding of her impact on the writer's life, you have come to understand something important about your place in the larger world." Reviewed by Daniel Weiss, Virginia Quarterly Review (Copyright 2006 Virginia Quarterly Review)
Synopsis
An autobiography that begins with one's birth begins too late, in the middle of the story, sometimes at the end. So begins Mary Lee Settle's memoir. Her story carries within it inherited choices, old habits, old quarrels, old disguises, and the river that formed the Kanawha Valley of West Virginia and the mores of her childhood. She traces effects on her family and herself as ancient as earthquakes, mountain formations, and the crushing of swamp into coal deposits. In doing so, Settle records the expectations, talents, and tragedies of a people and a place that would serve as her deep and abiding subject in The Beulah Quintet.
Synopsis
An extraordinary autobiography that goes back two generations before the celebrated novelist's birth
An autobiography that begins with one's birth begins too late, in the middle of the story, sometimes at the end. So begins Mary Lee Settle's memoir. Her story carries within it inherited choices, old habits, old quarrels, old disguises, and the river that formed the Kanawha Valley of West Virginia and the mores of her childhood. She traces effects on her family and herself as ancient as earthquakes, mountain formations, and the crushing of swamp into coal deposits. In doing so, Settle records the expectations, talents, and tragedies of a people and a place that would serve as her deep and abiding subject in The Beulah Quintet.
Like her grandmother Addie, who beckoned an audience with the words, Let me tell you something, Settle relays the story of her life with richness and compassion. She tells of her own birth on the day of the worst casualties of World War I, when her mother was obsessed with fear for a beloved brother stationed in France; of growing up in a time of boom and bust; of the Great Depression; of clinging to a frail raft of gentility that formed her early adolescence. She traces dreams from the attic of a music school where she found a friend who took her to Shakespeare and a teacher who forced her to recognize true pitch.
Addie ends back at its source, in the Kanawha Valley, with those, now dead, who helped to form the author's life. The memoir closes with the burial of the last of the inheritors of Beulah, Settle's cousin, to whom Addie is dedicated.