Please welcome our fellow member, Justin Murphy, to the blog today...
As someone born and half raised in Dothan, Alabama with the other half of my upbringing and more in Central Florida (only debatably part of The South), I’ve wondered what constitutes a Southern Crime writer or crime tale set in this region. Many have discussed and debated the works of literary authors in the vein of William Faulkner or Flannery O’Connor. Yet what I plan to explore and question ties more into the crime element. A few recent works I’ve read somewhat deal with this, as do several more books on my shelf.
While Harper Lee’s works To Kill A
Mockingbird and Go Set A Watchman, set in Maycomb, Alabama, don’t strike many
as being in the Crime genre. They do include the simple fact Atticus Finch is a
lawyer and the trial of Tom Robinson for the alleged rape of Mayella Ewell.
John D. MacDonald’s North Carolina based novel The Executioners, spawning two
film adaptations titled Cape Fear, also focuses on attorney Sam Bowden. Yet
this story isn’t about inclusion or racial injustice. His client Max Cady got
sent to prison for raping and beating an underage girl. Years later, the man
targets and attacks his wife and children for revenge, leading his former legal
counsel to defend them in a final showdown.
The former works are merely literary or
coming of age stories from the perspective of Jean Louise ’’Scout’’ Finch which
’’happens to depict’’ her father defending a wrongly accused man in a legal
proceeding. The latter also involves a protagonist who defended a client in a
trial many years earlier, but this story leans full tilt into a more extreme
portion of the genre. A suspense thriller where he must protect his family from
the guilty man he himself wronged. No matter what side of the genre spectrum
these stories fall on, they are an interesting study of mirrors and contrasts
in how the characters Atticus Finch and Sam Bowden are both barristers who deal
with issues regarding work and family in different ways. One tries to separate
his children from the dangers of the Tom Robinson case while the other’s wife
and child are already in such waters thanks to Max Cady’s pursuits. On a side
note, the fact Gregory Peck played both roles in film adaptations makes this
even more interesting and a testament to his talent as an actor.
Furthering this notion is how, in James
Lee Burke’s novel The Glass Rainbow, New Iberia, Louisiana based detective Dave
Robicheaux’s daughter Alafair dates a questionable man who’s involved with
another shady individual who might be at the center of the crime. One could
argue Southern Crime involves more personal stakes, instead of being some
high-octane thriller in an urban setting. Though Hannibal Lecter novels Red
Dragon and The Silence of The Lambs have Southern characters and aspects
despite sometimes being linked with the latter. Such as how F.B.I. profiler
Will Graham is from Louisiana in the former and investigates murders in
Birmingham, Alabama and Atlanta, Georgia while maintaining a home and family
life in Marathon, Florida. Trainee Clarice Starling hails from West Virginia,
where one of the murder victims is found and the follow up tale partially takes
place in Tennessee where Catherine Martin is being held by Buffalo Bill. Yet
both novels hit close to home for their characters. Graham must defend and
protect his family from Francis Dolarhyde in the end. Likewise, Starling
shooting Buffalo Bill and rescuing Catherine Martin allows her to overcome the
childhood trauma of losing her parents. Even more so with the failed rescue
attempt of a lamb about to be slaughtered at her cousin’s ranch before being sent
to a Lutheran orphanage.
Perhaps the biggest anomaly is Midnight In
The Garden of Good and Evil. A real-life true crime story set in Savannah,
Georgia. It centers on Jim Williams, a man who bought and renovated properties
and antiques, killing his lover Danny Hansford and being tried four times for
his murder. A lot of the emphasis is on quirky characters, like fictional works
of Southern Literature. Such as transgender entertainer The Lady Chablis, Sonny
Seiler, an attorney who breeds and keeps mascots for The Georgia Bulldogs
football team. Like with the above examples, the matter is personal between
Williams and Hansford. This may be the takeaway from Southern Crime, regardless
of fiction or non-fiction, these tales appear to have more personal stakes than
the big or brash criminal activity of their urban counterparts. Alongside the
much-discussed intimate settings, is how the nature of the crimes also tend to
be such. Whether it be a literary story which ’’happens’’ to feature criminal
aspects or a full blown genre story submerged in it.
Justin
Murphy ©2023
2 comments:
Justin,
You discuss some outstanding books which do have Southern settings, contributing much to the works.
Justin, great post! It's funny, I never exactly thought of Red Dragon as a Southern novel (as many times as I've read it), but it does have elements of Southern Gothic
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