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Roxanna Slade (1998)

by Reynolds Price

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294690,424 (3.54)12
An old woman born in 1900 reflects on the joys and sorrows of her long life, commenting on them with wisdom. She is Roxanna Slade, matriarch of a rural family, and her story gives a portrait of the South before the great changes.
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» See also 12 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Good story of a young woman. ( )
  kslade | Nov 29, 2022 |
I did not expect to love this book as much as I did. I kept a notebook with me always while I was reading so I could write down any text I found meaningful. All in all I had almost two pages before the novel ended. I like Reynolds Price's style.

Some personal favorites:
pg. 136 "I've tended to bite my fingernails in worrisome times, and soft-shelled crabs have always seemed to me like a fingernail biter's ideal food."

pg. 151 "As Fern faced me then, he looked like the last Angel Eve ever saw as she left Eden. He nodded Yes and raised his right hand swearing silence. And he kept that silence the rest of his short life."

pg. 179 "Who do you get depression from or the wild excitement of mania? Doctors and experts can talk forever, but no one's yet explained to me where strictly mental Hell comes from."

The book showcases only what Roxanna deems as the remarkable events of her life, from her meeting of Larkin Slade and his brother Palmer, to her marriage, her indomitable mother-in-law and the birth of her children, all the way up to her preparation for death as an elderly lady in her nineties. This is definitely worth a reread one day down the road when I'm feeling pitiful and lonely.

Wonderful. ( )
2 vote quillmenow | Jul 24, 2012 |
A view of the 20th century thorugh one woman's small, ordinary, extraordinary life. RS was born in 1900 and she is writing her memoir from the perspective of 90+ years. She spent her entire life in a small North Carolina town, and the story doesn't necessarily sound like it's going to be interesting, but the way Anna sees life, the world, herself and the people around her make this a very compelling story. It is beautifully written, with prose like simple poetry. Highly rated, highly recommended. ( )
  citygirl | Dec 29, 2010 |
Reading this book was like reading my grandmother's diary. Although their lives were nothing alike, they lived in the same time period and they both lived rather ordinary lives that seem extraordinary by today's standards. Life was hard in the early 1900's and much sadness was borne with everyday courage.

In these ruminations of a 90-year-old North Carolina woman, we look deeply into a melancholy soul. Roxanna shows the careful reader much wisdom about how to live a life worth living. She trusted in her belief that every life is "useful to the world and to the eyes of God." She had much to forgive in her life and much to be forgiven for.

She talks frankly about the way blacks were treated and about how black women were used by white men. Women didn't have the choices in life that we have today and lived their lives of quiet desperation. Roxanna certainly suffered in her long life, but she did it with grace and found meaning and truth in whatever came her way.

Recommended for those who enjoy books about women with quiet strength ( )
1 vote Donna828 | Aug 23, 2009 |
Southern Gothic meets chick lit ( )
  michael09 | Feb 16, 2009 |
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An old woman born in 1900 reflects on the joys and sorrows of her long life, commenting on them with wisdom. She is Roxanna Slade, matriarch of a rural family, and her story gives a portrait of the South before the great changes.

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