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A Miracle of Catfish: A Novel [Hardcover]

Larry Brown

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Book Description

Mar 21 2007
Larry Brown has been a force in American literature since taking critics by storm with his debut collection, Facing the Music, in 1988. His subsequent workfive novels, another story collection, and two books of nonfictioncontinued to bring extraordinary praise and national attention to the writer New York Newsday called a master. In November 2004, Brown sent the nearly completed manuscript of his sixth novel to his literary agent. A week later, he died of a massive heart attack. He was fifty-three years old. A Miracle of Catfish is that novel. Brown's trademarkshis raw detail, pared-down prose, and characters under siegeare all here. This beautiful, heartbreaking anthem to the writer's own North Mississippi land and the hard-working, hard-loving, hard-losing men it spawns is the story of one year in the lives of five charactersan old farmer with a new pond he wants stocked with baby catfish; a bankrupt fish pond stocker who secretly releases his forty-pound brood catfish into the farmer's pond; a little boy from the trailer home across the road who inadvertently hooks the behemoth catfish; the boy's inept father; and a former convict down the road who kills a second time to save his daughter. That Larry Brown died so young, and before he could see A Miracle of Catfish published, is a tragedy. That he had time to enrich the legacy of his work with this remarkable book is a blessing.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 455 pages
  • Publisher: A Shannon Ravenel Book (Mar 21 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1565125363
  • ISBN-13: 978-1565125360
  • Product Dimensions: 23.5 x 16.1 x 4.1 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 771 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #761,512 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

This sprawling novel was unfinished when Mississippi writer Brown (Dirty Work, etc.) died at 53 in 2004. (It remains so, according to a note from editor Shannon Ravenel, who includes Brown's own notes for how the novel would end.) Cortez Sharp, a widower in his later years, decides to build a catfish pond on his Mississippi acreage, mostly because the pond will serve (he imagines drily and obliquely) to bring others around and assuage his dark loneliness. Nearby live young Jimmy and his ne'er-do-well father ("Jimmy's daddy"). There's also Lucinda, who is Cortez's daughter and the mother of Albert, a young man with Tourette's syndrome who speaks in rhyming obscenities. Lucinda pops tranquilizers and has a talent for getting into odd squabbles (over the quality of pigs' feet in a supermarket, for one). Elsewhere, Cleve, an African-American ex-con, kills a soldier who is the object of his daughter's affections and hides the body in the woods. Despite the cuts that Ravenel says were made (marked in the text with ellipses), there's a lot of superfluously detailed family history, interior monologue and Dixie atmospherics. Would-be boffo sequences (Cortez driving a tractor into the pond; Jimmy becoming inconsolable when his father sells his beloved Go Kart), are not sharp enough to carry one through. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Brown died of a heart attack in 2004, leaving behind his sixth novel--short one ending. Unfortunate, as that is about the only thing missing from this rugged, masterful work. Brown's writing is both caustic and gratifying, his fully wrought characters despicable yet irresistible, and the rural South environs alternately suffocating and idyllic. Cortez Sharp, the near definition of a crotchety old man, builds a catfish pond on his property, awaiting fishing season with the giddy anticipation of a boy. Down the dirt road from Cortez's farm lives such a boy, Jimmy. Too bad for Jimmy, his daddy is nothing but a screwup whose primary preoccupations are driving around drinking beer and neglecting his son. At age nine, the boy has never once gone fishing with his father, which in this world amounts to a tragedy of nigh epic proportions. The gulf between Cortez, who embodies the older, southern-gothic tradition with all its inherent prejudices and violence, and Jimmy's daddy, the picture of modern white trash, is vast and resonant. Though Brown is no stranger to exploring father relationships, his biggest coup is how adeptly he slides into the agile cadence of a nine-year-old's far-wandering thoughts. The result is heartrending. One can only hazard a guess at the missing final chapters, but the brutally funny, eloquent wonders that remain are innumerable. Damned fine, and a damned shame. Ian Chipman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.6 out of 5 stars  20 reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The last hurrah of talented writer Larry Brown Aug 24 2007
By Schtinky - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
'A Miracle Of Catfish' was unfinished when author Larry Brown died unexpectedly. Because the book was almost finished, publication of Brown's last offering to his fans was possible. The book uses ellipsis to show where editing was done, and though unfinished, includes the notes that Brown left behind as to how he planned to wrap up the novel.

In Brown's languid southern prose, he explores the lives of several people living in the quiet, countrified outskirts of a small town. Cortez Sharp, a 72 year old man who's wife is disabled, decides to dig out a large pond on his property and stock it with catfish. He lives a solitary life, preferring to be left alone with his vegetable patches and herds of cows. His daughter Lucinda lives in Atlanta with her boyfriend Albert, who suffers from Tourettes Syndrome. Cortez calls Albert 'The Retard', driving a wedge between him and his only surviving child. Cortez carries a dark secret with him, one of horrible proportions.

There's Jimmy, a ten year old boy with bad teeth, who lives near Cortez's farm in an old trailer. Jimmy struggles with his father's temper, his two half-sisters Evelyn and Velma, and his desire to fix the go-kart his daddy built for him. Jimmy's Daddy (known only in the book as 'Jimmy's Daddy') is a typical redneck loser. He drives around in his old '55 drinking beer and smoking cigarettes, fights with himself over trying to treat Jimmy better, and has an affair with a woman at the stove factory where he works that turns out bad (in pregnancy) which threatens his life and marriage to Jonette.

And then there's Cleve, an old black man who used to work for Cortez, mean as a polecat, and murderous to boot. He's been in prison twice and though he swore he'd never go back, he's not quite done committing crimes.

Typical of Brown's unhurried and languorous prose, there's lots of smoking, beer drinking, and driving around. There's surprises like DUI's, tractor accidents, unwanted pregnancies, affairs, fishing, hunting, and a young boy worried about having puppies.

These aren't exactly people you would want for neighbors, but Brown brings them out fully fleshed and alive, and you know there are people out there just like Brown's characters. Everyday folk struggling with everyday problems, inner monologues that both repulse and enchant, and scenes that will suck you into the story despite their slowly building climaxes.

While I highly recommend Brown's work, I would recommend 'Joe', 'Fay', and 'Father And Son' as a warm up to 'A Miracle Of Catfish', simply because this is an unfinished work and may leave the novice Brown reader feeling flat at the abrupt end. It's sad that this is the last time we will hear Brown's voice in the literature world. Enjoy!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book you will never finish May 11 2007
By S. Fitzsimons - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Larry Brown's a Miracle of Catfish is nothing short of amazing. I was a little dissapointed by Rabbit Factory, and more so when I thought it would be the last thing I ever read from one of the most talented wrtiters I have ever read. I was nervous and excited when the book finally showed up, wondering if it would be as good as I hoped.

It was actually better than I expected. The book switches between points of view of many of the characters at each chapter break, providing different perspectives on the events that connect the characters lives. It is hard not to feel compassion for all the characters, even Jimmy's daddy, who, by all accounts, is a total scumbag.

The only dissapointment was not being able to read the ending. The book is close enough to the end that one can guess how it would turn out, but after so many emotional ups and downs, some sort of catharsis would have been great. I am sure Mr. Brown would have given us that if he hadn't been taken away while he should have been typing out the last few pages and going down to sit by his catfish pond and think about the latest book he created.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Unfinished but pleasing anyway July 10 2007
By Zilla M. Spencer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I have the same feeling reading Larry Brown as I do reading Faulkner: He's writing about us! And this latest is the same as the others of his; he has the weather, the land, the people, the animals and all down pat. It's like it is down here. He's just chosen a few characters to show a representation but he uses them to give insight into the universal truths as Faulkner says. It's a shame he wasn't able to finish the book but it's wonderful that his wife and publisher went ahead with what's there. And most of it is there.
I was in the Oxford Hospital getting a stent put in and finally going home after a week of tests and procedures when I read that he'd died suddenly of a heart attack. I always wanted to meet him as I thought we had so much in common. A couple of years before I thought I saw him leaving Square Books as we were going in- my brother from North Carolina who always wants to got to Square Books and my wife and our daughter who lives in Oxford. He had on a gray raincoat or light overcoat and he smiled at us when he saw us getting out of the car and heading into the bookstore. What a loss.
Beverly Lowry of George Mason University has written a fine review in the April 27, 2007, New York Times Book Review and I'm sure there are others. Read this book and you'll want to go back and read his others too.
Dewitt Spencer

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