By Kim Michele Richardson
Sourcebooks 2019
308 pages Literary
The most important aspect of an historical novel is the
research that goes into it. Richardson has done an incredible job in creating
an historical novel that is both creative and meticulously researched. It is
the story of a young woman in 1930s Kentucky Appalachia. My book club read it
this month and we had a lively discussion last week.
Cussy Mary, a young single woman, lives in the hills and hollers of Kentucky during the 1930s. She
has applied and been accepted as a pack horse librarian, which was a job for women,
sponsored by the WPA. Her job is to deliver books by horseback to the people on
an established route in her mountain neighborhood. She knows her readers well and works very hard to find the materials that her clients want—everything
from the classics to magazines to newspapers, many weeks old by the time they
get to Cussy. She makes her way through the mountains on a mule named Junia,
who is both her protector and best friend as well as the carrier of the library
materials Cussy carries.
What distinguishes Cussy Mary from other young women of the
area is her color. She is one of the last of the Blue People of Kentucky. This
was a clan of blue-tinged people that had populated the area for several
generations. They have hidden in the hills because they have been ridiculed and
shunned and classified as inbreds, which they were not. Thank goodness for
Google, because I had never heard of the blue people, but when I read up on it,
I discovered that this aspect of the story line was remarkably true.
It would appear that Cussy (or Bluet, as she was called by
her clients) had more than three strikes against her, but she is strong and
feisty, and she prevails. She loves her job and takes pride in the help that
she offers her clients. People rely on her to read stories to them, bring them
news from the outside world, and even provide food if necessary. Her work is a
testament to the power of reading and books.
There’s a lot of heartbreak in The Book Woman of Troublesome
Creek, not just for Cussy Mary and her father, a miner, but also for the people
in the hills. The description of life is remarkable, thanks to the skilled writing
of Richardson. Here is one paragraph. “I found the tiny cabin stitched into a
mountain, tarred with black pine and stingy sunlight. In the yard, two crows
drank from mud puddles. Overhead, more cawed before dropping down to scar the
yard. Two sick chickens peeked around the corner of the cabin, their combs and
wattles festered with the fowl pox. A rawboned dog dozed on the crumbling
porch. Junia snorted, and the pup raised its mangy body and flattened its
flea-bitten ears before slinking off.” Inside, Cussy finds her favorite child client, Henry, and his siblings suffering from
pellagra, and Henry is dying.
One reviewer says that Richardson doesn’t “pull punches when
it comes to describing the hardscrabble lives of the hill people.” Yet, I
considered the descriptions to be fairly realistic, contrasted, as they were,
with great moments of hope and kindness. I do have to say that the ending is
quite abrupt, and we are not allowed enough time to enjoy the happiness that
Cussy Mary finds as she discovers true love and her life moves on to another level.
The only weakness I found in a totally engrossing book.
I can highly recommend The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek. I especially enjoyed the pictures of the Kentucky Pack Horse librarians that come at the end of the book.
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