About this item
Highlights
- Malheur August opens with a map of Malheur County, OR and its Malheur River.
- Author(s): Nancy Judd Minor
- 204 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Biographical
Description
About the Book
In Malheur August in 1971, Jean Algood is slowly figuring out what her parents were like back in the 1940s--and how they grew so bitter. A bossy Mormon aunt, a town librarian, an old farmer--all tell bits of an increasingly complex story about Clete and Oleta Algood. There's little room for nostalgia, but some for hope in this finely made tale.Book Synopsis
Malheur August opens with a map of Malheur County, OR and its Malheur River. "Malheur" means "bad time," we're told--and Nancy Minor plays with that notion skillfully. Set in 1971 with substantial flashback to the 1940s, her novel becomes an utterly convincing portrait of life in rural Oregon a generation or two ago. (Think of Grant Wood joking around with Dorothea Lange.)
Our protagonist, Jean Algood, spends her last home-from-college summer, the summer of 1971, questioning her parents' friends and neighbors about what Clete and Oleta had been like at her age, and about what had gone wrong--what had embittered her father and hollowed out her mother in the years before she was born.
The questioning here is triggered by a photograph Jean and her cousin find when they venture into the ramshackle hut of the town's recently deceased "old hermit." Who was the hermit? Why did he keep a Kodak image of young Clete Algood in an empty coffee can in his filthy shack? Who was the beautiful girl standing next to Clete in the photo, the one with the too-familiar eyes? The "mannish" woman in the photo, they remember from another Kodak back home: it's Clete's twin sister, Cloris, who hasn't been seen in Malheur County since 1946. The plot thickens as they try to identify the hermit. Sweetens as their mother's old friend recounts parts of Oleta's story. Sours when Clete's tractor overturns. Thickens again when Aunt Opal--Clete's uber-bossy Mormon sister--manages to contact Cloris. And then quietly explodes.
This is not a bildungsroman, and it's not a murder mystery; it's a recovery tale, beautifully fragmented and waiting to be stitched back together into the crazy quilt which was "this American life" 50 or 75 years ago. It's spot-on about mid-20th-century rural life: it's full of affection and humor and dread. It's replete with rodeos and kittens, seductions and pregnancies, apple pies and accidental deaths and half-hearted heroism. It's loaded with secrets and their keepers. If you've ever studied the faces in old FSA photos, you've been in Malheur County. Read this book to understand those times.
Review Quotes
Inspired! Malheur August is so vivid in setting and character that you feel like you're going back to a place you've never been before and are a part of someone else's life, one that feels utterly, painfully real. And even while you are aching, you suddenly find yourself laughing out loud.
--- Cynthia Whitcomb, author of The Heart of the Film
Nancy Judd Minor's beautifully written Malheur August tells the story of a complex family and a small rural community. Descriptive, lyrical, humorous, and suspenseful, Minor immerses us in her characters' dialect, place and culture. In a novel about departure and returning and the nature of time, she lets a younger generation unravel the mysteries of their elders' lives. What results is a vivid, vibrant and riveting narrative, all ultimately flowing, like the [Malheur] river, towards a surprising and satisfying destination.
--Julie Bolt, Associate Professor, City University of New York
"Malheur August offers a nostalgic and heart-wrenching glimpse into the role place has in our lives and a fresh perspective on family, loyalty, and the ties that bind. Nancy Judd Minor captures an Eastern Oregon farming community of the 1970s and 1940s with prose whose sheer beauty is at once crisp, stark, and evocative, like the Oregon high desert itself. This is a rich book."
---Elissa Rust, author of The Prisoner Pear