Beth Gilstrap in conversation with Leesa Cross-Smith

Other

2720 Frankfort Avenue,Louisville KY 40206

06 October, 2021

Description

“These stories are little gardens—the words blooming, the rain too.”—Leesa Cross-Smith Masks are required for in-person events. Irrevocably tied to the Carolinas, these stories tell tales of the woebegone, their obsessions with decay, and the haunting ache of the region itself—the land of the dwindling pines, the isolation inherent in the mountains and foothills, and the loneliness of boomtowns. Predominantly working-class women challenge the status quo by rejecting any lingering expectations or romantic notions of Southern femininity. Small businesses are failing. Factories are closing. Money is tight. The threat of violence lingers for women and girls. Through their collective grief, heartache, and unsettling circumstances, many of these characters become feral and hell-bent on survival. Gilstrap’s prose teems with wildness and lyricism, showing the Southern gothic tradition of storytelling is alive and feverishly unwell in the twenty-first century.

By:  view source

Discussion

By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.

/
Search this area