PortadaGruposCharlasMásPanorama actual
Buscar en el sitio
Este sitio utiliza cookies para ofrecer nuestros servicios, mejorar el rendimiento, análisis y (si no estás registrado) publicidad. Al usar LibraryThing reconoces que has leído y comprendido nuestros términos de servicio y política de privacidad. El uso del sitio y de los servicios está sujeto a estas políticas y términos.

Resultados de Google Books

Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.

Cargando...

Wolf Whistle (1993)

por Lewis Nordan

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
285992,567 (3.9)15
ALA Notable Book; 1994 Mississippi Writers Award for Fiction; 1994 Southern Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. In WOLF WHISTLE, Lewis Nordan unleashes the hellhounds of his prodigious imagination on one of the most notorious racial killings of the century, the Emmett Till murder. Soon we're on a magical mystery tour of the Southern psyche of the mid-1950s and the dawning of guilt and recognition in a whole generation of white Southerners. "An immense and wall-shattering display of talent. WOLF WHISTLE will help usher Lewis Nordan into the Hall of Fame of American Letters."--Randall Kenan, The Nation.… (más)
  1. 00
    Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime That Changed America por Mamie Till-Mobley (bnbookgirl)
  2. 00
    Matar un ruiseñor por Harper Lee (WSB7)
    WSB7: Contrast the courtroom scenes.
  3. 00
    Dirty Little Angels por Chris Tusa (WSB7)
    WSB7: Wolf Whistle is another version (and funnier) of soul-eating/soul-sucking modernity.
Cargando...

Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará.

Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro.

» Ver también 15 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 9 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Redneck order-keeping in the seg south. White trash history with a laugh or two as a black young man is killed. A tour of a poor-as-piss Mississippi delta town. ( )
  kerns222 | Aug 24, 2016 |
If I were to choose three words to describe Nordan's work, it would be haunting, hilarious, and tragic. Usually such elements are a recipe for disaster, or at the very least a digressive narrative train wreck , but Nordan seamlessly weaves together elements of humor and tragedy, the grotesque and absurd with verdant beauty. Wolf Whistle is a novel whose images will linger with you long after the reading has ended.

Wolf Whistle is based on the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, whose life was taken because he allegedly "wolf whistled" a white woman. This event would ultimately catalyze momentum for civil rights activism in the decade. Jordan sublimates this memory of the tragic event, which impacted his own childhood, into a collective meditation on the nature of Southern culture in the 1950s. Set in the fictional one horse town of Arrow Cather, Mississippi, no facet of society remains unexamined. Irony, satire and caricature are applied to all of his characters, except to Bobo, the murdered boy, who remains the pure and moral center of the novel. It is around Bobo's murder that the complex racial and cultural relations of this novel pivot. The murder reverberates through each character, no matter how major or minor. Each chapter oscillates from a different character's perspective/ reaction to the tragedy. In result, the reader is able to experience the true ethos of the era: the struggle of the white working class, intense racial segregation, the failings of the justice system, and of course, the cathartic power of the Blues.

In an interview with the author, Nordan states that his novel is ultimately "a serious story about death and grief and broken hearts" but that it exists on "a plane, sometimes comic, even burlesque, just askew of the real historical universe." And it is in his sensuous, evocative prose that we are taken into the surreal setting of the Delta, where elements of magical realism are melded with historical fact. By mythologizing this event, I believe the reader experiences the tragedy all the more profoundly. Nordan will truly be remembered by this haunting and remarkable piece. ( )
1 vota Casey_Marie | Apr 27, 2015 |
Lewis Nordan works on the edge of magic. In Wolf Whistle the harsh reality of deeply ingrained racism and outright murder blends into fantasy and beauty and back again to real and ugly. In Arrow Catcher, Mississippi a black boy from Chicago named Bobo makes a weak and unsuccessful proposition to a wealthy white woman. She gives him a ride home to get him safely away from the scene of what she knows is considered a crime in the south.

Bobo turns up dead and two white suspects are put on trial, including the woman’s husband. That’s not the entire story. Nordan intertwines the lives of several of Arrow Catcher’s residents. Glenn Gregg is a nine year-old that severely burned himself trying to set his daddy, Solon, on fire. Alice, the new and innocently adulterous fourth grade teacher takes her students on a field trip to visit their burned classmate, as well as to the morgue, a sewage treatment plant and the murder trial. She’s still in love with an old college professor and although she feels almost like Jesus, being surrounded by children, she has “excellent reason to believe that Jesus never would in one million years have slept with a married man.”

Wolf Whistle combines the horrific with black humor and makes it sing. The blues of course, like Robert Johnson would. ( )
  Hagelstein | Jan 24, 2012 |
Good: the description and characterization were excellent. Everyone had their own believable backstory.
Bad: the plot didn't really go anywhere. It was more of a slice-of-life picture than a story.
Certainly worth reading, but I'm not sure I'll actively search out other books by Nordan. I'll be curious to see what the next person thinks of it. ( )
  melydia | Oct 28, 2009 |
Nordan's writing was masterful. A surreal look at the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till in Money, Mississippi led me, of course, to seek out some of the real facts. But the book itself, with it's unusual "magical" aspect (Till's 'demon eye' viewing the murder scene and his murderer) kept me anxious to finish reading the book. Comical scenes (the parrot in the courthouse, "Peter Skeeter", Sally Anne's purchase of feminine products at Red's Good Lookin Bar & Gro) juxtaposed with unexpected poignant ones (Solon--the 'bad' guy-and family playing wash tub music for the dying son) made this a fine book in spite of the depressing historical background of the Till lynching. This is a book I would have never chosen to read if not for the local library's program "Let's Talk About It" discussion funded by the N. C. Humanities Council. ( )
  patricia_poland | May 9, 2009 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 9 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
sin reseñas | añadir una reseña

Pertenece a las series

Debes iniciar sesión para editar los datos de Conocimiento Común.
Para más ayuda, consulta la página de ayuda de Conocimiento Común.
Título canónico
Título original
Títulos alternativos
Fecha de publicación original
Personas/Personajes
Lugares importantes
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Acontecimientos importantes
Películas relacionadas
Epígrafe
Dedicatoria
Primeras palabras
Citas
Últimas palabras
Aviso de desambiguación
Editores de la editorial
Blurbistas
Idioma original
DDC/MDS Canónico
LCC canónico

Referencias a esta obra en fuentes externas.

Wikipedia en inglés

Ninguno

ALA Notable Book; 1994 Mississippi Writers Award for Fiction; 1994 Southern Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. In WOLF WHISTLE, Lewis Nordan unleashes the hellhounds of his prodigious imagination on one of the most notorious racial killings of the century, the Emmett Till murder. Soon we're on a magical mystery tour of the Southern psyche of the mid-1950s and the dawning of guilt and recognition in a whole generation of white Southerners. "An immense and wall-shattering display of talent. WOLF WHISTLE will help usher Lewis Nordan into the Hall of Fame of American Letters."--Randall Kenan, The Nation.

No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca.

Descripción del libro
Resumen Haiku

Debates activos

Ninguno

Cubiertas populares

Enlaces rápidos

Valoración

Promedio: (3.9)
0.5 1
1
1.5 1
2 2
2.5 3
3 8
3.5 3
4 12
4.5 4
5 17

¿Eres tú?

Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing.

 

Acerca de | Contactar | LibraryThing.com | Privacidad/Condiciones | Ayuda/Preguntas frecuentes | Blog | Tienda | APIs | TinyCat | Bibliotecas heredadas | Primeros reseñadores | Conocimiento común | 204,766,688 libros! | Barra superior: Siempre visible