Little Boy Blues: A Memoir Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Little Boy Blues: A Memoir Book

Guest Reviewer: Elizabeth Kostova Elizabeth Kostova is the author of the international bestsellers The Historian and The Swan Thieves. She graduated from Yale and holds an MFA from the University of Michigan, where she won the Hopwood Award for the Novel-in-Progress. Little Boy Blues, Malcolm Jonesâ?? elegant, poignant riff on his North Carolina childhood in the 1950s and â??60s, is actually much more than a memoir. Moving with grace and irony between the personal and the social, it traces a boyâ??s growing consciousness of family traditions and conflicts, race relations, music, religion, and a mid-south landscape--a landscape that has by now collapsed into the ground with many of the old houses in which such lives were once played out. Jones grew up mainly near Winston-Salem, with forays into South Carolina. He also grew up the only child of an ultimately single--and frequently bitter--mother, a bright, hardworking woman who hungered for respectability for her small family. At the heart of his story, rendered with humor, painful honesty, and compassion, stands an often-anguished bond between mother and son. Malcolm Jones doesnâ??t let his examination rest there, however. The beauty of the book lies in his ability to give small specificities an understated greater meaning: he touches on the liberation provided him by music, for example, in his meticulous rendering of the scratched-up shellac record that introduced him to the blues: â??. . .the crackling hiss on its surface told me that someone had played it a lot.â? A child surrounded by adults and their mysteries, the young Jones seems to have been as keen an observer as the older one, spectator in a world where manners and prayers were exhaustively taught but the obvious pain of adult lives never explained. I might as well confess here that Iâ??ve ruined my copy of this book by turning down the corners of too many pages I found myself rereading on the spot. Iâ??ve also ordered plenty more to give to friends of three generations. Little Boy Blues is already among my favorite American memoirs, member of an elite line-up. I donâ??t know what plans Malcolm Jones has for a second such reminiscence, but I devoutly hope there will be one. Read More

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  • Product Description

    From one of our most astute cultural observers, a piercing memoir about a family’s breakup and the need simultaneously to embrace and distance ourselves from the people and events that shape us.
     
    North Carolina in the 1950s and 1960s:  A child surrounded mostly by grandparents, aunts, and uncles born in the previous century, Malcolm Jones finds himself underfoot in a disintegrating marriage. His father is charming but careless about steady work, often gone from home and often drunk. His mother, a schoolteacher and faded Southern belle, clings to the past while hungering for respectability and stability. Jones vividly describes their faltering marriage as it plays out against larger cracks in society: the convulsions of desegregation and a popular culture that threatens the church-centered life of his family. He also recalls idyllic times and the ordinary, easy moments of an otherwise fraught childhood: discovering an old Victrola, attending a marionette showâ??experiences that offer a portal to other worlds.
     
    Richly evoking a time and place with rare depth of feeling and a penetrating, often bittersweet candor, Malcolm Jones gives us the fundamental stories of a lifeâ??where he comes from, who he was, who he has become.

  • 0307377725
  • 9780307377722
  • Malcolm Jones
  • 12 January 2010
  • Pantheon Books
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 240
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