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Spartina (1998)

Spartina (1998)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.82 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0375702687 (ISBN13: 9780375702686)
Language
English
Publisher
vintage

About book Spartina (1998)

Spartina received the National Book Award when it was published in 1989. It deals a lot with one great American literary theme: class. Our hero is a decidedly cross Rhode Island waterman who would have been called “crotchety” in old Yankee culture. He lives hand to mouth, relying on the day’s catch of lobster, clams, crabs or swordfish and his wife’s garden to support his family – a wife and two boys. Meanwhile he pours his heart and soul into building his own wooden commercial fishing boat. The class theme cuts across his life: the guy out raking clams and pulling lobster pots is always the guy at the bottom of the economic totem pole. When he worked at a boat yard, he worked mainly on rich guys boats, of course, and that rankles. The upper crust around him is buying up his old family land for high-end waterfront and water view homes. If only his father didn’t have to sell the land years ago to make ends meet…..Our hero is also having an affair -- upper crust, educated New England gal meets blue collar “swamp Yankee.” Our hero turns anti-hero in the affairs department. He doesn’t have a clue about romance. A guy with dirt under his nails from tuning up his diesel engine just doesn’t make it in the wine and roses department. There’s also an inherent, let’s call it “vocational tension” in the affair between the woman, a natural resources officer, and a guy who skirts around the environmental laws to put food on the family table. He even does a little part-time drug smuggling to make ends meet, but since he’s basically one of the good guys, the author lets us see how he was kind of “dragged into it.” The chapter where our hero rides out a hurricane in his newly-launched boat ranks right up there with classic passages in sea literature. In 2010 Casey released a sequel, Compass Rose, and I look forward to reading it.

Over the past 15 years or so, I've managed to sprinkle into my reading diet 57 of the 67 National Book Award winners in Fiction. To date (late 2010), Spartina remains at the very bottom of the ones I've read (I'd have given it a ZERO if allowed). The back cover blurbs comparing it to Moby Dick and The Old Man and the Sea are decidedly offensive to anyone with an eye and mind for Literature (next to those masterworks, Spartina is just a guy and his dream of a boat FLUFF). To think that Casey's novel, which stays on the soap opera level when it's not trying to mythologize a man who makes self-indulgent mistake after mistake, is on the same list of winners as Invisible Man by Ellison, JR by Gaddis, The Adventures of Augie March by Bellow, or Gravity's Rainbow by Pynchon (not forgetting Roth or Updike or Faulkner) is simply mind-boggling. It read like a gawky underclassman's attempt at a novel, despite being about a man's mid-life crisis, complete with banal prose, stereotypical characters, and endless cliches all around. A stunning and eye-opening clear-cut low point for the National Book Award, as this one celebrates the mediocre and formulaic over the skilled and/or daring. It is the only NBA winner I refuse to shelve with the other NBA winners--it remains in a dusty, dark closet away from bright lights. Of course, over 50+ years of any award there will be some serious duds given the offerings any year presents. However, this is the worst NBA winner to date by far--there's really no close second in ignominy here. The Foundation would have done better to suspend the award for 1989 and not given it out at all.

Do You like book Spartina (1998)?

Spartina by John CaseyI first was interested in the 2nd book of this series and was happy to learn that I could still buy the first book.It's about Dick and he is a fisherman and he also has worked in various jobs around the shipyard. He knows how to do a lot of things besides being a fisherman, onshore and offshore and how to deliver boats to other locations, design his own boat but hecan't get the banks to loan him the money he needs to complete his big boat that he can then go offshore with to get the crab and lobsters he needs that bring in the big bucks.He takes on a job where he has to provide the seafood for 30 people on the beach that will have a clamboil in exchange the man will look at the boat he's buildinng in the back yard, in hopes he will fund the rest of the building of his boat.He tries to negotiate with Jackster but he wants a co signer. He continues to work getting red crab and swordifsh that brings in a lot of money.Dick has started to hang around with the DEM agent for many reasons: he can't get the money to finish his boat, he's bored and the sex is good.I saw how a clamboil is done in the backyard of a cousin one year: the rocks, seaweed and specially wrapped fish and onions and all kinds of other things that make the clamboil on the beach the best meal you've ever eaten.Love the talk of how to sail the boat and all the nautical terms.Legend of Indian wampum and how others think it was used as coins.He takes his boat out to sea when the hurricane hits then makes his way home to deal with the aftermath...
—Julie Barrett

I'm not sure why this book won the National Book Award. There are lots of well-written books published every year. I think the thing that sets this one apart is its depiction of a vanishing way of life - that of a New England man trying to make a living from the sea. I know the southern coast of New England intimately and grew up around men very much like the hero of this book, Dick Pierce. Mr. Casey has gotten the stubborn, non-verbal self-reliance of his protagonist exactly right, especially as contrasted with the nouveau riche "players" who are taking over his home town. The other thing I really enjoyed was the description of the coastline with its marshes, salt ponds and spartina grass. It was a visceral experience for me. I was less enthusiastic about the two principal women in the book. Dick Pierce's wife is pretty much just sketched in - a place holder - and we find out almost nothing about her. The other female, Elsie, is more complex, but not really believable and not really likeable. Way too much of the book is spent on her relationship with Dick. I think the author would have been better served by eliminating her and concentrating on the man and his boat.
—Blaire

Winner of the 1989 National book Award. i was attracted to this book by a quote from the NYT Book Review - "Possibly the best American novel...since "The Old Man and the Sea," maybe even "Moby Dick." That says a lot to me. While a very good work, I am afraid the accolades are too intense.Nowhere as sparse as Hemingway, or as intense as Melville, This is nonetheless a good example of the philosophical introspection common in much of modern literature, with an interesting story thrown in. A man struggles to build his own fishing boat, has an extramarital affair, smuggles dope, saves his ship by outrunning a hurricane, and manages to find some level of balance and peace in his tumultuous life.Spartina was the name of his ship and also the name of a type of swamp or salt-marsh grass.
—Bookman8

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