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Loading... Ava's Manby Rick Bragg (otherwise under Bragg Rick)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This readable story traces the lives of an American man of the South, the iconic hard working father, and his equally admirable wife through life in the early 20th century. Beautifully written. ( )Ava's man was Bragg's maternal grandfather who passed away before Rick was born into poverty. Like William Faulkner, Bragg writes of the poor American South with such vivid descriptions that you feel as though you are walking along a hot, dusty path in a depression era back woods, spiting tobacco and drinking moon shine as your caloused hands and achy back trudge along yet one more soul depleting day. Like Pat Conroy, Bragg captures the essence of an abusive father who simply won't let go of the booze and the demons. Life was hard, mean and nasty and wore Bragg's family down to a pulp. Bragg's admiration for his grandfather shone through. This is the second book of his that I've read and I'll continue to learn of Bragg's saga. It is wonderful to read such clear, crisp images. This guy can write! In this second book about his heritage, Rick Bragg uses family stories to capture the nature and personal history of his Maternal Grandfather. Not as potent a work as "Shoutin'", but important in understanding his Mother's resilience. Charlie Bundrum drank too much and he fought too much. When confronted by the law, he didn't often go peacefully and many a young Alabama lawman suffered through a rite of passage of having to subdue Charlie Bundrum before taking him in. But Charlie was a good man, one of those strong depression-era men that came out of the South to leave his mark on generations to follow him. Rick Bragg never knew his grandfather, Charlie Bundrum, who died in 1958 at age 51 before Bragg was born. But Bragg managed to learn more about his grandfather than most men will ever know about their own and in Ava's Man he shares his grandfather with the world. First, and foremost, Charlie Bundrum was a family man. He had a fiercely tender love for his children and he was willing to do whatever it took to protect them from harm. His children, especially his girls, responded with the kind of love that all good fathers wish for themselves. Rick Bragg, in fact, discovered that their love was so deep and so heartfelt that they could hardly stand to talk about the man who spent his life working so hard for their survival. It was easier to keep that love in their hearts rather than to feel the pain of loss that they felt when Charlie was discussed. Charlie Bundrum lived for his family and they, in turn, learned the proper way to live life from Charlie. He taught them of love and of loyalty to family, but when he "adopted" a strange little river man who was being physically abused by bullies and brought that man into his family home for several years, he taught them that charity is more than a word heard inside a church on Sunday mornings. Charlie was a powerful man who liked his "likker," but nothing made him happier than to be surrounded by his grandchildren, as many of them as possible in his arms at one time. Ava's Man finishes the story that Bragg began with All Over but the Shoutin', the story of how his mother worked so hard to raise him and his brothers under difficult conditions. Now we know where his mother found the strength to accomplish that and why Bragg feels such a strong love for his family. Don't miss either of these books. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com's Best of 2001 (ISBN 0375410627, Hardcover)The same fierce pride and love that animated All Over but the Shoutin' glow in Rick Bragg's new book. In fact, he informs us in the prologue that it was the readers of his bestselling 1997 memoir about his mother's struggle to raise three sons out of dire poverty who told him what he had to write about next. "People asked me where I believed my own momma's heart and backbone came from ... they said I short-shrifted them in the first book." Bragg sets out to make amends in this heartfelt biography of his maternal grandfather, Charlie Bundrum, who with wife Ava nurtured seven children through hard times that never seemed to ease in rural Alabama and Georgia. "He was a tall, bone-thin man who worked with nails in his teeth and a roofing hatchet in a fist as hard as Augusta brick," writes Bragg, "who inspired backwoods legend and the kind of loyalty that still makes old men dip their heads respectfully when they say his name." Charlie's children adored him so much that 40 years after his premature death in 1958 at age 51, Bragg's elderly aunts and mother began to cry when asked about him. Chronicling Charlie's hardscrabble life in the flinty, expressive cadences of working-class Southern speech, Bragg depicts a rugged individual who would find no place in the homogenized New South. The marvelous stories collected from various relatives--Charlie facing down a truckload of mean drunks with a hammer, hatchet, and 12-gauge shotgun, or brewing illegal white whiskey in the woods ("He never sold a sip that he did not test with his own liver")--are not just snapshots of a colorful character. They're also the author's tribute to an oral culture with tenacious roots and powerful significance in the American South. --Wendy Smith(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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