House of Cotton
by Monica Brashears
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Description
"Nineteen years old, broke, and effectively an orphan, Magnolia doesn't have much to look forward to. She feels stuck and haunted: by her overdrawn bank account, by her predatory landlord, by the ghost of her late grandmother Mama Brown. One night while working at her dead-end gas station job, a mysterious, slick stranger named Cotton walks in and offers to turn Magnolia's luck around. He offers her a lucrative "modeling" job at his family's funeral home. Magnolia accepts. But despite things show more looking up, Magnolia's problems fatten along with her wallet. When Cotton's requests become increasingly weird, Magnolia discovers there's a lot more at stake than just her rent. Sharp as a belted knife, this sly social commentary cuts straight to the bone, revealing the aftermath of the American plantation and what it means to be poor, Black, and a woman in the God fearing south. Impossible to put down, Brashears's House of Cotton will keep you mesmerized until the very last page"-- show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Honestly, if a fresh Southern Gothic novel complete with haints sounds like your jam, just read this book. I'm trying to find some words to do this one justice! I was immediately on Magnolia's side as she imagines herself as the smallest details from fairy tales, as if she is thinking of herself as the breadcrumbs in Hansel & Gretel or the bean in Jack & the Beanstalk. There is something endearing about Magnolia imagining herself as the smallest things, especially when she wants her mind to drift from her difficult situation. The book begins with the death of Magnolia's grandmother, which leaves 19 year old Magnolia with really no one left to help her out in Tennessee. But then she meets a strange man that would like her to mimic the show more lost loved ones of people willing to pay for an odd sort of closure. It's probably her ability to imagine herself as the smallest things in fairytales that enable her to channel the missing women convincingly. Side character Eden is a highlight -- helping Magnolia transform her face into the missing women, as Eden herself uses makeup to look like a different celebrity every day. This is clearly not something healthy for Magnolia to be doing -- to feel less small. There is really something that can elevate a book (that also must be difficult to accomplish for a writer) when a reader is 100% on Magnolia's side from page one, even if Magnolia sometimes doesn't make the best choices. I don't want to outright compare this book to Toni Morrison, as nothing really should be, but there IS a Toni Morrison epigraph at the beginning (plus, a few others.) So the Toni Morrison influence is there, but Brashears is no imitator. I do enjoy that even though this book was dark, it did manage to maintain some magic and I guess you could say the same about fairytales. I would set this on the shelf beside 'Nightcrawling' by Leila Mottley -- both books featuring young women trying to survive in tough situations. Plus, there is a Raven Leilani blurb for this book, and I SUPPOSE this book is worthy of sitting beside the lovely 'Luster'. I wish Magnolia, Edie and Kiara could be friends supporting each other. But AH, some books I am just extremely glad I actually picked up, out of the billions of books out there, and this is one of them. I can't wait to see what Brashears writes next. show less
This is one of those fantastic stories that rewards a careful reading. Part katabasis and part modern gothic, it leaves a reader overjoyed with the fertility of its interpretive value. I wouldn’t recommended it for those who prefer a literal story and take events at face value. I borrowed this from the library but immediately went out after and bought myself a copy so I could have it always.
The Short of It:
Raw and brutal.
The Rest of It:
One night, while working at her dead-end gas station job, Magnolia Brown encounters a mysterious, slick stranger named Cotton. He offers to turn her luck around with a lucrative “modeling” job at his family’s funeral home–where she will pose as clients’ dead loved ones. She accepts. ~ From the publisher
This story will hit you with a closed fist. The author holds nothing back. Magnolia’s struggle to live has her doing things that at first won’t shock you, but then as the story plays out, I found her desperation to survive shockingly sad. The people she encounters never have her best interests at heart. No. And deep down she knows it, but her walk to freedom is alarming at times. show more So much so that I almost put the book down more than once.
This was chosen for my book club so I felt the need to finish it and it left me in a strange place. On the one hand, the writing is peppered with beautiful moments but the story is dark, very dark. Death and decay hang out at every turn and it’s pretty explicit.
There are moments though, that reveal Magnolia’s true heart, like her relationship with a homeless man and the many memories of her grandma that are shared throughout the story. Life in a funeral home is rough and when you choose to play a dead loved one, things can get a little dangerous. Not so much the action of it, but what it does to your psyche. When you are so fully immersed in death, how do you separate life from death?
I will be honest here, House of Cotton was a FINALIST for the 2024 NYPL Young Lions Fiction Award and NPR’s BEST BOOK OF 2023, but it’s explicit in detail and might be a lot for someone not used to reading something so raw and ragged.
For more reviews, visit my blog: Book Chatter. show less
Raw and brutal.
The Rest of It:
One night, while working at her dead-end gas station job, Magnolia Brown encounters a mysterious, slick stranger named Cotton. He offers to turn her luck around with a lucrative “modeling” job at his family’s funeral home–where she will pose as clients’ dead loved ones. She accepts. ~ From the publisher
This story will hit you with a closed fist. The author holds nothing back. Magnolia’s struggle to live has her doing things that at first won’t shock you, but then as the story plays out, I found her desperation to survive shockingly sad. The people she encounters never have her best interests at heart. No. And deep down she knows it, but her walk to freedom is alarming at times. show more So much so that I almost put the book down more than once.
This was chosen for my book club so I felt the need to finish it and it left me in a strange place. On the one hand, the writing is peppered with beautiful moments but the story is dark, very dark. Death and decay hang out at every turn and it’s pretty explicit.
There are moments though, that reveal Magnolia’s true heart, like her relationship with a homeless man and the many memories of her grandma that are shared throughout the story. Life in a funeral home is rough and when you choose to play a dead loved one, things can get a little dangerous. Not so much the action of it, but what it does to your psyche. When you are so fully immersed in death, how do you separate life from death?
I will be honest here, House of Cotton was a FINALIST for the 2024 NYPL Young Lions Fiction Award and NPR’s BEST BOOK OF 2023, but it’s explicit in detail and might be a lot for someone not used to reading something so raw and ragged.
For more reviews, visit my blog: Book Chatter. show less
I enjoyed reading this book, but I didn't fully connect to it. The characters are interesting. I was never bored. In fact, it's quite readable. I just never felt any emotion for the characters. It's not the typical sort of book that I read, and the blurb makes it sound a bit more sinister than it is. I spent about 60% of the book waiting for something other than Southern Good Ol' Boy Racism to happen. It never did.
Magnolia works at a gas station in Knoxville, TN. Her mother is a deadbeat, and she was raised by her grandmother, who has just died when the book opens, leaving Magnolia at loose ends. A wealthy man comes into the gas station, is instantly captivated by her, and offers her a job as a model. She is intrigued, but soon discovers he works at a funeral home, and this "modeling" job actually requires dressing up as dead women to talk to their families. Throughout the book, Magnolia is visited by her dead grandmother, who offers her advice.
There is so much that just doesn't make sense about this book. I get that a gothic novel requires some suspension of disbelief, but this is all just too implausible, and there's so much about the show more characters that doesn't make sense, and the story never really comes together. show less
There is so much that just doesn't make sense about this book. I get that a gothic novel requires some suspension of disbelief, but this is all just too implausible, and there's so much about the show more characters that doesn't make sense, and the story never really comes together. show less
whoa, this is so good and so surprising. i'm sure it deserves a closer read than i gave it. what an interesting take on so much, and with really good writing.
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Hard to classify ... It's an incredible debut that announces the arrival of a unique voice in contemporary fiction ... House of Cotton is a bizarre, uncomfortable read in the best way possible. Brashears delves deep into what it means to be a young, broke woman of color in a world in which predatory men are at your doorstep, in the streets, and even at church. She's not always likable, but show more real people rarely are ... This is a novel that refuses to obey the rules of any one genre, and that, complicated as it might be for some, is one of the best things about it ... Peculiar and slightly surreal, but also dazzling, full of surprises, and told with a voice that's unpredictable and, more importantly, that lingers. Darkness can have slices of beauty at its core, and Brashears has a talent for pointing out that beauty, while its submerged in grit and grief. Fans of brave fiction would be remiss to skip this one. show less
added by Lemeritus
It’s a lot, and occasionally it feels as if the novel meanders — story lines emerge and then fall away, superseded by yet another narrative development. But it’s a testament to Brashears’s enchanting storytelling that the deluge of plot doesn’t overwhelm the book. Just the opposite: The cascading waves of unsettling encounters and unexplained phenomena imbue it with the thrilling show more energy of possibility.... There is a word commonly used to describe books like this: gritty. Fair enough. “House of Cotton” is unafraid to peer at the unsavory minutiae of getting by. But for this novel, I’d add a few other labels too: magnetic, singular and completely unforgettable. show less
added by Lemeritus
Brashears has written a lush, pictorial, and often steamy novel with an indelible heroine. Coupling classic gothic elements with a realistic portrayal of the issues facing a young, poor, Black woman with few options, the novel’s many strengths culminate in a powerful and original story that will appeal to a variety of readers across fiction genres.
added by Lemeritus
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Bitter Southerner Summer Reading Roundup
198 works; 8 members
Which house?
423 works; 16 members
Southern fiction reading list
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Fiction: BLM
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Author Information
1+ Work 332 Members
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Awards and Honors
Awards
Distinctions
Notable Lists
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- House of Cotton
- Epigraph
- Oh, if I don't get some rapunzel from the garden behind our house, I shall surely die. -Brothers Grim, "Rapunzel"
I don't want to make somebody else. I want to make myself. -Toni Morrison, Sula
And from a little girl I had been taught that you don't waste your time telling people things you know they won't believe. -Gloria Naylor, Mama Day
It tasted so very good to her that by the next day her desire for more had grown threefold. -Brothers Grimm, "Rapunzel" - Dedication
- To House Mountain, whose location I change at each story's insistence, for looming over my life and hosting so much strange beauty.
- First words
- I ain't never felt as trapped and choked as I do right now. When I get this way, when feel like kudzu is wrapped tight around my rib cage and I'm bleeding a bright heat, I like to slip inside my head. I can forget about this ... (show all)hard-packed pew and all the silk, wide-brimmed hats bobbing to the mourning gospel. I ain't here. I ain't in Mountain Bend Baptist. I ain't even in Tennessee.
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 813.6000
- Canonical LCC
- PS3602.R3855
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Statistics
- Members
- 330
- Popularity
- 95,152
- Reviews
- 10
- Rating
- (3.62)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 3
































































