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Book cover of Half Moon Pocosin
Science & Technology - Fiction, Settings & Atmosphere - Fiction, Love & Relationships - Fiction

Half Moon Pocosin

by Cherry L.F. Johnson
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Overview

Set in the 1930s in easter North Carolina, this is the story of Cindy, a woman whose parents have forced her into giving up her deep desire to become a school teacher and pressured her into marrying a man she does not love. Isolated in a primitive cabin, Cindy is a devoted mother but is filled with longing for a different kind of life. Like the women who lived there before her, Cindy knows there must be something outside the Pocosin, the marshland that surrounds her home. Cindy must decide where to continue living the life others expect of her or to live for herself. But freeing herself from the only life she knows also means severing ties with her family and risking the fate of her small daughter, Callie.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The studiously simple prose of her first novel is probably Johnson's attempt to invest her short narrative with the quality of a country story told by plain folks. But the touches of dialect are not enough to add color to a generally bland and uninteresting tale. The heroine is Cindy, who in the midst of the Depression lives with her husband, J.D., and their baby daughter, Callie, in a rough house on a North Carolina tobacco farm that's been in J.D.'s family for generations. Only one other family dares to live in Half Moon Pocosin, because folks believe the lonely marshland is haunted. Cindy wouldn't be living there either, if she'd had her way. Her dream was to be a schoolteacher, but her parents pressured her into marrying J.D., a scarecrow of a fellow whose hair always pokes straight up "like weeds on the edge of a wood's fire.'' Slogging her way from one farm chore to another (most of them described in detail), Cindy yearns over a traveling shoe salesman named Sam, tries to find time to read whenever possible and dreams of escape. The ghosts of the women who lived and died in the 'cosin before her watch and wait and hope she'll have the courage they lacked. Concentrating on the monotony of Cindy's life, this novella may ring true as a description of backcountry existence, but it lacks the spark of imagination required to turn dull reality into compelling fiction. (Dec.)

Monitor Christian Science

"Johnson's sympathetic narration movingly conveys the quet agonies of Cindy's dilemma and the stoical courage it can take to lead-or endure-a constricted life."

Book Details

Published
November 1, 1997
Publisher
Chicago : Academy Chicago Publishers, c1997.
Pages
167
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780897334389

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