We Are the Living explained

We Are the Living
Author:Erskine Caldwell
Country:USA
Language:English
Publisher:Viking Press

We Are the Living is a 1933 collection of short stories by Erskine Caldwell, comprising some of his earlier works.

Background

Viking Press published the collection in September 1933. 16 of its 20 stories were previously published in various magazines, while four -- "The Medicine Man," "Meddlesome Jack," "The Grass Fire," and "A Woman in the House" -- were new.[1]

Some stories in the collection are humorous or satirical, while others are lyrical, romantic and/or tragic. Several of them are laid against the background of the lives of ordinary people in the contemporary US South, the social milieu most familiar to the author; some are specifically located in his home state of Georgia.

Contents

The stories in the book include:

Critical reception

Biographer Wayne Mixon wrote that We are the Living largely "went unnoticed in the southern press." Mixon suggests that the inclusion of "August Afternoon" -- a story about a lazy white farmer, a drifter who seduces the farmer's wife, and his Black field hand who refuses Vic's order to accost him -- was to blame.[2]

TIME magazine, reviewing the collection in 1933, highlighted Caldwell's more bawdy, humorous stories as standouts. Of those, they wrote: "Mark Twain would have roared over [these stories] -- in private."[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: MacDonald . Scott . Critical Essays on Erskine Caldwell . 1981 . G-K. Hall . 9780816182992 . 14 April 2023.
  2. Book: Mixon . Wayne . The People's Writer: Erskine Caldwell and the South . 1995 . University of Virginia Press . 978-0-8139-1627-9 . 58 . 14 April 2023 . en.
  3. News: Books: U. S. Humorist . 14 April 2023 . TIME . 2 October 1933.