Rollicking, original fiction with a Southern accent
Compressing eleven such boisterous works
between two covers produces a resounding impact.
Described by one reader as a collection of "little
disturbances," Body Parts brings together Jere
Hoar's award-winning, phantasmagorical stories. Together
and individually, they cause delight. All are set in the
South. They are, in fact, stories that could have taken
place nowhere else.
Consider the titles alone and you will know
you are entering a world measured by a wicked eye and
ear. In "Tell Me It Hasn't Come to This" a
lonely woman spends her days waving to strangers who pass
her house. Then one of them, a man with a purpose, raps
on her door. In "The Incredible Little Louisiana
Chicken Killer" a hungry little creature raids the
hen house of a childless Louisiana couple. They capture
it and take it into their home, only to discover that it
is a man-devil.
In a folk tale with an epic swagger -
"The Snopes Who Saved Huckaby" - a distant
kinsman of Faulkner's tribe is forced out of the ministry
by sins of the flesh. He finds refuge in a girls' school,
where abundant temptation causes him to horse-trade with
God.
Praise for the stories conveys their power
and originality: "I could not put them down because
of the pleasure of the lines," says the story writer
Moira Crone. "I never knew what word or line I was
going to be reading next." "This writer,"
Ernest Gaines says, "reminds me of Damon Runyon and
Erskine Caldwell for his sundry of characters, and
Caldwell for realism and earthy humor." Fred Chappel
says, " '...Chicken Killer' makes me smile every
time I think about it."
Allan Gurganus found the heart of the Snopes
story: "Here is a lie, a tale, a rumor, a cheap
laugh and a hard lesson," he says. "In prose
that can become at times as elegantly irreverent as the
rootiest folktale of Marse Faulkner himself we find that
least likely job description, a Snopes teaching at a
girls' finishing school."
At a loss to convey and explain his impact,
Jere Hoar's readers have compared his storytelling with
Marquez's, his darker characters with Flannery
O'Connor's, and the vigor of his lines with Barry
Hannah's. But Jere Hoar is an original himself. Thus it
is probable in a later generation that some newcomer
writer with a special gift for seeing dark humor in life
and hearing music in language will be likened to Hoar.
Count on it.
Jere
Hoar is an emeritus professor of journalism at University
of Mississippi and an attorney. His stories have been
awarded the Pirate's Alley William Faulkner Prize
(co-winner), the first prize in the Deep South Writers
Conference Competition, and the Kansas Arts Council/KQ
Award.
286 pp.