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Betty: A novel by Tiffany McDaniel
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Betty: A novel (edition 2020)

by Tiffany McDaniel (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
4922550,083 (4.26)14
"A stunning, lyrical coming-of-age novel set in the rolling foothills of the Appalachians in which a young girl, with only the compass of her father's imagination, must navigate racism, sexism, and the dark secrets that will haunt her for the rest of her life. "A girl comes of age against the knife." So begins the story of Betty Carpenter. Born in a bathtub in Arkansas in 1954 to a Cherokee father and white mother, Betty is the sixth of eight siblings. The world they inhabit is one of poverty, racism, abuse, and violence--both from outside the family, and also, devastatingly, from within. After years on the road, searching in vain for a better life, the Carpenters return to their hometown of Breathed, Ohio, in northern Appalachia. There, they move into a sprawling wreck of a farmhouse that local legend says is cursed. The townsfolk decide the Carpenters are cursed, too: "My mother gave birth to eight of us," Betty tells us in her frank, wry voice. "More than one would die for no good reason in the prizewinning years of their youth. Some blamed God for taking too few. Others accused the Devil of leaving too many." But Betty is resilient. Her father's inventive stories are kindling for the fire of her own imagination and even in the face of tragedy and death, her creativity is irrepressible. Against overwhelming odds, she may be the first member of her family to break the cycle of abuse and trauma--and escape"--… (more)
Member:jenmanullang
Title:Betty: A novel
Authors:Tiffany McDaniel (Author)
Info:Knopf (2020), Edition: 1st, 480 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*
Tags:DNF

Work Information

Betty by Tiffany McDaniel

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» See also 14 mentions

English (19)  French (2)  Spanish (1)  All languages (22)
Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
Un cumulo di cose atroci, scritte con molta dolcezza. Mi chiedo quanto soffra, quanto abbia sofferto questa scrittrice. Eppure ha una forza e una brillantezza che ti fanno vedere una scintilla di speranza in mezzo alla disperazione. Questa è la storia di Bitty e della sua tragica, tragica famiglia. Il tono è un po’ quello de “il buio oltre la siepe”. Una grandiosa voce narrante che lotta con tutte le sue forze per non farsi travolgere dalla miseria e dalla crudeltà della povera umanità che la circonda. Oltre a tutta la disperazione è davvero un meraviglioso romanzo. ( )
  Mav_Danto | Jul 28, 2023 |
An easy five stars. Harrowing, hopeful, beautiful. A full review is in the works. ( )
  Reading_Vicariously | May 22, 2023 |
I feel like I generally don’t get easily disturbed but the animal abuse is what did it. It felt like it was there for shock value and it wasn’t really consistent with anything else about the character. It also was very graphic for no real reason I think. But overall I liked it I guess? Like it was well written. ( )
  ninagl | Jan 7, 2023 |
In a dark, dark book (with a pretty cover), there was a dark, dark story about the dark, dark events witnessed by a dark-skinned girl. Boy howdy, was this a depressing experience - but after a slow start, I was completely gripped and also couldn't stop thinking about the characters when I wasn't reading. Racism, sexism, abuse, incest, animal cruelty, and more deaths per novel since the days of Elizabeth Gaskell. Not a story for the faint-hearted!

Betty Carpenter is born to a white mother and a Cherokee father and grows up in a small-minded town called Breathed (Breath-ed) in Ohio during the 1960s. Children (and teachers) at school make her life hell for inheriting her father's colouring while at home her family of two sisters and three brothers is being destroyed by secrets from the past.

To start with, Betty's story reminded me of To Kill A Mockingbird (if told from Tom Robinson's perspective) - there are even one or two similar scenes like the 'cursed' Peacock house where the Carpenters live and the old woman who teaches Betty a valuable lesson. But Breathed is far, far uglier than Maycomb, turning this novel into a Southern Gothic nightmare with bizarre characters, in both name and nature - like the woman who wears a mask because she believes she has been disfigured by something she once witnessed - and apocalyptic events including kamikaze birds!

I really felt for Betty, who has to survive both her own torment and also bear the burdens of her family too, keeping the secrets of others while struggling with her own guilt. Only her father Landon is a positive influence, weaving fantastical myths and trying to promote pride in their shared Cherokee heritage. I felt sorry for Betty's mother, too, until one particularly harrowing scene of animal cruelty nearly made me throw up. Representing abuse through fictional characters is disturbing but hurting fictional animals is just gratuitous.

There is a lot packed into the story and the characters which still applies - Betty's principal manages to encapsulate attitudes towards women and people of colour which hasn't really changed since the 1960s: 'Women in pants lost your people your land,' he tells her. When she wears shorts to school because boys keep looking up her skirt, she is told that girls can't wear pants which draw the attention to the crotch but she is also to blame for not dressing 'modestly' and tempting the 'good sons' of the community with her body. Betty is also accused of stealing and caned with no evidence of the crime.

What it boiled down to was a frenzied hope that there was more to life than the reality around us. Only then could we claim a destiny we did not feel cursed to.

I loved how Betty turned her father's stories into a love of writing and capturing the truth on paper, burying her mother's and sisters' stories in jars until ready to face the heartbreak in her family. Words are the only defence she has against the world. Betty is somehow an inspiring figure in a depressing blend of social commentary and grotesque fantasy.

Take a deep breath and dive in but take a break every hundred pages - if possible - with a lighter antidote! ( )
  AdonisGuilfoyle | May 17, 2022 |
Simply put...a MASTERPIECE!

“It occurred to me then that to be a child is to know the cradle rocks both toward the parent and away from them. That is the ebb and flow of life, swinging toward and away from one another, perhaps so we build up the strength for that one moment we will be rocked so far away, the person we love the most is gone by the time we return.”
― Tiffany McDaniel, Betty

This one tore my heart apart then put it back together: a rollercoaster ride of tragedy and beauty. Don't let the simple, no thrills cover throw you…this is a complex, beautifully written and absolutely phenomenal piece of literature that will haunt you long after you closed the cover. This is an unforgettable story.

Be warned, there are several triggers that some people might find unsettling. Some trigger warnings are racism, incest, abuse, mental illness, violence, just to name a few. This book is not for the faint of heart. I would tell more of the story, but the book cover's “blurb” pretty much tells you what you need to know. If these triggers don't faze you, I highly recommend this MASTERPIECE! ( )
  Christilee394 | Jan 31, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
Tiffany McDaniel heeft een indrukwekkende en indringende roman geschreven over de ronduit vijandige maatschappij waarmee indianen te maken krijgen (en vaak nog steeds krijgen) in de Verenigde Staten. Bovendien heeft ze aandacht voor de verziekte omgangsvormen en geweld naar vrouwen die werd vergoeilijkt en zonder enige mededogen voor de slachtoffers onder het tapijt werd geschoven...lees verder >
 
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Epigraph
MY BROKEN HOME: You give me a wall / And I'll give you a hole. / You give me a window / And I'll give you a break. / You give me water / And I'll give you blood. -Betty
Dedication
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I'm still a child, only as tall as my father's shotgun. -Prologue
A girl comes of age against the knife. -Chapter 1
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"A stunning, lyrical coming-of-age novel set in the rolling foothills of the Appalachians in which a young girl, with only the compass of her father's imagination, must navigate racism, sexism, and the dark secrets that will haunt her for the rest of her life. "A girl comes of age against the knife." So begins the story of Betty Carpenter. Born in a bathtub in Arkansas in 1954 to a Cherokee father and white mother, Betty is the sixth of eight siblings. The world they inhabit is one of poverty, racism, abuse, and violence--both from outside the family, and also, devastatingly, from within. After years on the road, searching in vain for a better life, the Carpenters return to their hometown of Breathed, Ohio, in northern Appalachia. There, they move into a sprawling wreck of a farmhouse that local legend says is cursed. The townsfolk decide the Carpenters are cursed, too: "My mother gave birth to eight of us," Betty tells us in her frank, wry voice. "More than one would die for no good reason in the prizewinning years of their youth. Some blamed God for taking too few. Others accused the Devil of leaving too many." But Betty is resilient. Her father's inventive stories are kindling for the fire of her own imagination and even in the face of tragedy and death, her creativity is irrepressible. Against overwhelming odds, she may be the first member of her family to break the cycle of abuse and trauma--and escape"--

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