Saturday, January 12, 2019

The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings


Here is Beethoven's Symphony no. 1.



And here is some cuteness to brighten your day.  My blue quaker Sophie is a snuggler.  This is how she goes to sleep every night.





The YearlingThe Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I was not expecting to enjoy this book as I did. Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings simply was not an author I had a remote interest in. I went to the library and happened to see some books for sale for a dime. There was one containing the letters of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Max Perkins. I had no idea who Max Perkins was and I did not care for Rawlings.

But there is something about a thick hardcover selling for a dime that I find irresistible. So I bought it and eventually read it.

I am glad I did, because by the time I finished the 628 page tome, I was enamored with both Max Perkins and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings; hence this review of my latest finished read, The Yearling.

On the one hand, this book is about the day to day survival of families living off of the land in Central Florida in the 1870s and has a lot in common with Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House on the Prairie books. They both show the joy and hardship of trying to survive by one's own exertion on an often stubborn and unyielding land. The only difference would be location and time period (well, the House Books started in the 1860s; I suppose you could say they overlap). And while the House books take place over several years, The Yearling happens inside one year. Wilder's family farmed on the plains of the mid west. The Baxter family farmed in woods and near swamps and bayous in the humid heat of Florida. However, many of the animals, bears, wolves, panthers, were the same; the Baxters also had alligators to hunt.

We see the Baxter family as they plant, hunt, get sick, endure hurricanes, and plague and we suffer with them. Reading The Yearling is truly a vicarious experience.

Like the Little House series, which are from the viewpoint of a child, Laura, the limited narrator in The Yearling is Jodi, a boy on the edge of puberty. The overall theme of the book is about Jody leaving childhood and entering into adulthood.

The Ingalls family may have had Native Americans to contend with, the Baxters had the Forresters, a wild, lawless, backwoods family that could be good friends or horrible enemies, often depending on how much they had to drink.

While the Little House books had their charm and poignancy and will always be a childhood classic, and also a classic for adults like me, The Yearling also has its place for sheer power in writing.

I found the descriptions of animals killing each other, killing the Baxter's cattle and the men killing bears and panthers to be disturbing, not because I think it was wrong, they had to do what they had to, I'm just glad we don't have to do that anymore.

And, of course, there is the Yearling. Jody's father had to kill the mother to treat a Rattle Snake bite. Something about the deer's liver drawing out the poison or so they believed back then. Anyway, that left an orphaned fawn. Jody takes the fawn home and it becomes his dearest friend, which is sad in its own way, because it reveals the isolation and loneliness a child can experience when he has no siblings or neighbors as companions.

Jody's mother is no Caroline Ingalls. Caroline had a quiet dignity, self-contained, and almost aristocratic, ladylike bearing. Ory or Ma Baxter, is as tough as leather. She buried five or six children. Jody is the only one to survive infancy. She's learned that it's hard to survive and all too easy to die. But she is not without her moments and every now and then her love for her husband, Penny, and Jody peek through.

The father, Penny, balances out his wife's pragmatic, no-nonsense, philosophy with compassion and wisdom.

While the fawn is mostly peripheral to the story, as the book progresses it creeps closer to the center of the story until he comes crashing down as the climax and centrifugal force that propels Jody into manhood. It is a painful life lesson and one that few people would want to learn today and I'm glad I can live a life of ease and grocery stores.

While some may consider this a boy's novel; I would almost consider it too dark for boys. I would not have read it to my son when he was Jody's age. He cried at the end of "Where the Red Fern Grows."

I'm grateful those hard lessons are not required anymore in my first world existence.

In conclusion? A fine, powerful novel, superbly written and fully deserving of the Pulitzer Peace Prize that it won in 1939.



View all my reviews




16 comments:

mudpuddle said...

excellent review... i recall starting this when i was about 12, i think... that would have been in 1955, but i didn't finish it for some reason; maybe i was too young... there's at least one movie made of it and i might have seen it sometime... anyway, there were lots of mentions of it in the media, i remember and it was regarded as a critical tour de force...
it's nice that you have such a close bond with your little friends: i think it must be quite unusual...

Brian Joseph said...

Absolutely superb review Sharon. As a child I remember a lot of my peers either seeing the film or reading the book. By pure chance I never saw the film or read the movie. It sounds very worthy. The ending sounds like it is a bit difficult. But it is true that sometimes such things are part of life. We are indeed lucky to live In today’s world.

Sophie Is very cute. My cat does the same thing but she tends to be a bit disruptive of my sleep.

Ruth @ with freedom and books said...

This is a classic! (I've not read it, but I've heard of it and seen it around for decades.) And now that know what it is about, I won't overlook it if I see it around.

I appreciate life stories like this, but like you, I'm grateful for grocery stores and a lot of other things.

P.S. My kids were really sad about Where the Red Fern Grows, but I wonder if my 11-year old would still like it. He's not bothered by gore.

Cleo @ Classical Carousel said...

Aw, I remember loving this book as a child! I really do need to read it again. And exactly! It reminded me of Where The Red Fern Grows. Great review!

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Mudpuddle. I saw part of the movie. It seemed to focus more on the fawn and I was therefore surprised to see that there was so much more to the story than that.

I am a little crazy about my burbies. Other bird people understand.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Brian. I love cats and wish I could own some, but I don't think it would be a good mix. In college I shared an apartment with my sister and she had a black cat; a little panther. It always slept right next to me every night.

Thank you for the compliment. I hope you will read The Yearling and review it.

Sharon Wilfong said...

My son was fine with Where the Red Fern Grows until the very end, which I won't mention in case someone reading this hasn't read it, I think he was nine years old. He got up from the living room, went into another room where I could hear him weeping. I felt so bad.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Cleo. Thank you. I think I would have bawled my heart out if I read this as a kid. I am too soft-hearted.

RTD said...

Perkins is fascinating ... I recommend Max Perkins: Editor of Genius Kindle Edition
by A. Scott Berg (Author) ....

Ruth @ with freedom and books said...

The good thing is, he has red blood flowing through his veins...meaning, he responded exactly as a compassionate/empathetic/dog-loving human should.

Debbie Nolan said...

Dear Sharon I didn't read this book but did watch it on tv many years ago. It is certainly a hard tale. Later I saw a movie about Ms. Rawlings during the time she wrote the book. I am not sure the title of the movie now but it was very good too. Take care and thank you for the review. I just love your Sophie...what a sweetie.

Sharon Wilfong said...

I'll have to post about the time one of our dogs got a bird and we rescued it but it seemed terminally wounded. I told Derek to get the shovel and kill it (because I was a coward, I already had to kill a rat my dogs had terminally wounded). Derek was a teenager, but he could not do it. Then he was disappointed in himself for not being "tough enough". I said there was no shame in being tender-hearted.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi R.T. I did read Berg's biography and thought I reviewed it but I cannot find it. It was really good. I have since bought the letters between Ernest Hemingway and Perkins. That should prove interesting.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Debbie! Thank you. Sophie says, "Sqauwk"! She's still learning to speak. She sounds like she is, but you just cannot make out the words.

If you ever read the Yearling, make sure you have a box of tissues handy.

RTD said...

Oops ... change of address because of reboot after meltdown ....
https://rtmarginalis.blogspot.com/

I’m not sure how Perkins put up with all the egos .....

Sharon Wilfong said...

He drank alot.