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The Healing

por Gayl Jones

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1602170,598 (3.8)11
Gayl Jones's special gift is to shape experience and make it seem unshaped. -John Alfred Avant, The New Republic Gayl Jones's first novel, Corregidora, won her recognition as a writer whose work was gripping, subtle, and sure. It was praised, along with her second novel, Eva's Man, by writers and critics from all over the nation- John Updike, Maya Angelou, John Edgar Wideman, and James Baldwin, to name a few. The publication of The Healing, her first novel in over twenty years, is a literary event. Harlan Jane Eagleton is a faith healer, traveling by bus to small towns, converting skeptics, restoring minds and bodies. But before that she was a minor rock star's manager, and before that a beautician. She's had a fling with her rock star's ex-husband and an Afro-German horse dealer; along the way she's somehow lost her own husband, a medical anthropologist now traveling with a medicine woman in Africa. Harlan tells her story from the end backwards, drawing us constantly deeper into her world and the mystery at the heart of her tale-the story of her first healing. The Healingis a lyrical and at times humorous exploration of the struggle to let go of pain, anger, and even love. Slipping seamlessly back through Harlan's memories in a language rich with the textured cadences of the black Southerner, Gayl Jones weaves her story to its dramatic-and unexpected-beginning.… (más)
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Harlan Jane Eagelton is a faith healer with a colorful past. Her history of being a rock star's manager, a hair dresser and a turtle in another life make for some wonderful storytelling (if you can get past the repetition). Harlan is smart, yet her country-bumpkin manner of speaking isn't fooling anyone, least of all the reader. Nuggets of knowledge are firmly wedged between the bumpkin babble. Case in point - in rambling about odds and ends she inserts the names of Inuit and Inupiag peoples of Alaska with a clear understanding of the difference. Another key element to Harlan's story is that she tells it backwards. You begin with her current occupation as a faith healer and work backwards to fill in the gaps. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Nov 16, 2010 |
The first book I read by Gayl Jones. I was amazed by how she shifted stories in this novel; when it started with the scenes of the healer, I expected magical realism (a genre that I am actually not particularly interested in), but as the plot shifted into examining the relationship between the Harlan Jane Eagleton (the healer) and her lover, and the Harlan and the Joan Savage (the singer she manages), I felt very drawn in.

Jones presents characters that are a patchwork of experience and interests, which in itself suggests a political purpose of breaking stereotypes. And yet, it doesn't read as didactic to me: the characters are believable, and intriguing, and ones that I ultimately care about.

The main character's narrative repetition brings to mind oral tradition. It also serves as a sort of narrative song that I thought would get irritating, but was more reassuring and soothing: almost a tidal voice.

What I love about Gayl Jones is that she creates shifting plots and shifting people, drawing my attention as a reader to the other meanings that are implied through these slippery surfaces. ( )
  allison.sivak | May 2, 2007 |
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Gayl Jones's special gift is to shape experience and make it seem unshaped. -John Alfred Avant, The New Republic Gayl Jones's first novel, Corregidora, won her recognition as a writer whose work was gripping, subtle, and sure. It was praised, along with her second novel, Eva's Man, by writers and critics from all over the nation- John Updike, Maya Angelou, John Edgar Wideman, and James Baldwin, to name a few. The publication of The Healing, her first novel in over twenty years, is a literary event. Harlan Jane Eagleton is a faith healer, traveling by bus to small towns, converting skeptics, restoring minds and bodies. But before that she was a minor rock star's manager, and before that a beautician. She's had a fling with her rock star's ex-husband and an Afro-German horse dealer; along the way she's somehow lost her own husband, a medical anthropologist now traveling with a medicine woman in Africa. Harlan tells her story from the end backwards, drawing us constantly deeper into her world and the mystery at the heart of her tale-the story of her first healing. The Healingis a lyrical and at times humorous exploration of the struggle to let go of pain, anger, and even love. Slipping seamlessly back through Harlan's memories in a language rich with the textured cadences of the black Southerner, Gayl Jones weaves her story to its dramatic-and unexpected-beginning.

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