After several years of silence
and seclusion in Beetlecreek's black quarter, a carnival worker named Bill
Trapp befriends Johnny Johnson, a Pittsburgh teenager living with relatives
in Beetlecreek. Bill is white. Johnny is black. Both are searching for
acceptance, something that will give meaning to their lives. Bill tries
to find it through good will in the community. Johnny finds it in the Nightriders,
a local gang. David Diggs, the boy's dispirited uncle, aspires to be an
artist but has to settle for sign painting. David and Johnny's new friendship
with Bill kindles hope that their lives will get better. David's marriage
has failed; his wife's shallow faith serves as her outlet from racial and
financial oppression. David's unhappy routine is broken by Edith Johnson's
return to Beetlecreek, but this relationship will be no better than his
loveless marriage.
Bill's attempts to unify
black and white children with a community picnic is a disaster. A rumor
scapegoats him as a child molester, and Beetlecreek is titillated by the
imagined crimes.
This novel portraying race
relations in a remote West Virginia town has been termed an existential
classic. It would be hard, said The New Yorker, to give Mr. Demby
too much praise for the skill with which he has maneuvered the relationships
in this book. During the 1960s Arna Bontemps wrote, "Demby's troubled townsfolk
of the West Virginia mining region foreshadow present dilemmas. The pressing
and resisting social forces in this season of our discontent and the fatal
paralysis of those of us unable or unwilling to act are clearly anticipated
with the dependable second sight of a true artist."
First published in 1950,
Beetlecreek
stands as a moving condemnation of provincialism and fundamentalism. Both
a critique of racial hypocrisy and a new direction for the African-American
novel, it occupies fresh territory that is neither the ghetto realism of
Richard Wright nor the ironic modernism of Ralph Ellison. Even after fifty
years, more or less, William Demby said in 1998, "It still seems to me
that
Beetlecreek is about the absence of symmetry in human affairs,
the imperfectibility of justice the tragic inevitability of mankind's inhumanity
to mankind."
William Demby is the author
of The Catacombs and Love Story: Black. He lives in Sag Harbor,
N. Y. James C. Hall, a professor of African-American Studies and English
at the University of Illinois, Chicago, is the author of the forthcoming
book, Mercy, Mercy, Me: African-American Culture and the American Sixties,
and editor of Langston Hughes: A Collection of Poems.
232 pp.