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Trash
R**N
Ten essential stories of the "bad poor", with five more specialized stories of lesbianism
Here is how Dorothy Allison introduces herself in TRASH:"The central fact of my life is that I was born in 1949 in Greenville, South Carolina, the bastard daughter of a white woman from a desperately poor family, a girl who had left the seventh grade the year before, worked as a waitress, and was just a month past fifteen when she birthed me. That fact, the inescapable impact of being born in a condition of poverty that this society finds shameful, contemptible, and somehow oddly deserved, has had dominion over me * * *."The literate, well-heeled portion of our society that runs mainstream media tends to ignore the poor, and when forced to acknowledge their existence it often prefers to romanticize or mythologize them as the sturdy, stoic, hard-working backbone of America. That wasn't Dorothy Allison's folks. "We were the bad poor. We were men who drank and couldn't keep a job; women, invariably pregnant before marriage, who quickly became worn, fat, and old from working too many hours and bearing too many children; and children with runny noses, watery eyes, and wrong attitudes." Her people were trash.Originally published in 1988, TRASH is a collection of 15 powerful stories of life as experienced by Dorothy Allison. Judging from this book alone (I know very little about Allison from beyond the covers of the book), the stories must have a high quotient of autobiography.In ten of the stories, the "bad poor" are front and center, in discomfiting bluntness and detail. Allison limns the world of textile mills, waitressing, belt-wielding (and much worse) step-fathers, fishing camps, gospel-singing, shoplifting, male lust, and cheap alcohol delivered in a myriad of ways. It is just as much America as 50th floor corner offices, ivy-covered college campuses, health clubs, and amber waves of grain.Exacerbating her pariah-hood, Allison is lesbian. In five of the stories in this collection, it is lesbianism that is front and center, including some very graphic sex scenes. To me, those stories are misplaced. If TRASH had been presented as a memoir I would feel differently, but it is a collection of stories entitled "Trash" and billed as a stark portrayal of Southern poverty. The lesbianism, though very much a part of Allison's life, is not necessarily part of the existence of the bad poor and its presence in this collection distracts from the depiction of the bad poor. No doubt I am somewhat influenced by the fact that I am repulsed by the scenes of lesbian sex - just as I am repulsed or annoyed by scenes of male homosexual or male/female sex. (I have never bought or browsed through any collection of overtly sexual or erotic stories; sex, like prayer, is too personal to experience vicariously.) I think the lesbian stories would be more effective portrayals (at least for non-lesbians) of the social challenges of lesbianhood without the raw sex, but even so I believe they should not have been included in a collection of stories about trash.Ultimately, TRASH is about surviving and struggling to maintain some dignity, some sense of self-worth. For Allison, both anger and humor have been essential in doing so. The stories are well-written, if not brilliantly so. Ten of them are well worth reading by everyone in this country.
J**G
Not my favorite . . .
I found this book though exceptionally well written, a bit too graphic for my taste. While, I will eventually read Ms. Allisonโs next book, Bastard Out of Alabama, Iโll take a break and read something less graphic next.
A**R
Not my cup of tea
I actually paid money for this book because it came highly recommended. I enjoyed the first couple chapters and the last couple, but the middle bored me to tears. I have nothing against LGBTQ at all. However lesbian sex was the body of this book, each chapter a different "dyke" (her words, not mine) and a different location, but the same mechanics, over and over and over again. Enough! Maybe if I weren't 71 it might have been more interesting. But as it was, and as I am, I hated the book and skimmed over a great deal of it. I don't recommend Trash, but it might be right up your alley.
E**N
Winner of two Lambda Literary Awards
Powerful and not to be missed. This is a collection of autobiographical narratives, essays, and performance pieces that you will never (and should never) forget.The author Tee A. Corinne in her book `Lovers: love and sex stories' says "Dorothy Allison crafts from her own life powerful erotic passages that defy circumspect parameters..."This was the most intense reading I have done in a long time. This should be recommended reading in all colleges and universities.Not to be missed other titles from the author are - Bastard Out of Carolina, Skin, and The Women Who Hate Me. More information can be found at he author's web page.If you need to feel a whole lot better about how the author triumphed over her horrendous childhood she and her family of choice are profiled in the book - Love Makes a Family: Portraits of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Parents and Their Families by Peggy Gillespie, Kath Weston, Gigi Kaeser, and April Martin (Paperback - May 1999).
L**W
Sad and lovely
My favorite stories in this collection are "Don't Tell Me You Don't Know" and "Demon Lover". I think these two short stories best exemplify Dorothy Allison's ability to bring a reader into the lives of characters. She creates people who feel totally real, deeply complex, and most importantly, incredibly interesting. These are stories about people who have suffered but still managed to get by, often because of the strong but flawed women in their lives who, of course, have suffered too. Allison tells stories about people you might call "white trash", and yet she makes you see them as they are rather than as stereotypes. She brings you to identify with their flaws. All this, paired with Allison's graceful, vivid prose makes her one of my favorite authors. Dorothy Allison puts her whole soul into her works, and it's both sad and beautiful.
D**D
Not an uplifting book.
This book was strange and didnโt make much since. It was an unpleasant book to read, there were no happy moments to break up the down moments. Very bleak story line. You just felt sad for this person and main character in the story.
A**L
Interesting but not engaging
I found the writing beautiful, but did not really engage with any of the characters . I learned some new perspectives but the story didn't hold together for me.It
Y**C
Treasure
A bought to prepare for seeing the author at a conference. At times, and on the surface it seemed rambling, unfocused. But on re-read, every word mattered.
P**P
I love this book
A classic- Allison is a gifted writer with a vision wholly specific and therefore universal. She's a treasure. I love this book.
D**Y
Enriched edition
This is an enriched edition of this classic of american litterature. Allison is still accurate after all this years. Brilliant.
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