Review:
Pamela Petro's travel in
Sitting Up with the Dead is a voyage, not a road trip, through the myths and memories of the American South. Her signposts are the storytellers who, by profession or proclivity, keep alive a history that is unique in the United States.
The American Deep South is a country of its own, one where the sounds of the cicada, the mocking bird, church revivals and banjos mark time. But it is particularly in the cadence of voices--a variety of accents as indecipherable to an unaccustomed ear as that of Glaswegian or Geordie--that is the heart of Petro's journey. Petro's travels take her through the Carolinas, the Appalachian mountains, Louisiana and the Florida swamps. Each chapter features a storyteller peppered with information on the region, the folklore and, often, the politics of race that is so grounded in this part of the country.
The author of Travels in an Old Tongue brings the same keen ear to the personalities of the storytellers such as Ray Hicks and David Holt. She knits her own narrative in an online conversation with budding performance artist Vickie Vedder who has worked the problems of her "dirt poor" southern family into terrific characters.
One warning: many of the tale and some interviews are written in dialect. They demand to be read aloud. "Mah gran'father tol 'em (stories) when I'us little. An' I tried to tel 'em at fivh yay-yrs ole'..I liked 'em. Loved th'stawries. An' do yet," says Ray Hicks after telling Petro a couple of yarns.
Skip Petro's introduction and just jump in but do save the title story for last. As a narrative on a dying art and for the pleasures of laughing and reading aloud, Petro has stitched together a lasting tale of her own. --Kathleen Buckley
Review:
"The origins of Southern literature are its folktales and local stories, and the South is full of storytellers. Pamela Petro has found the best of them, recounting their complete stories and the detailed circumstances of her journey in search of them. This book is both important as scholarship and great fun as a trip." Paul Theroux, author of Deep South: Four Seasons on Back Roads
"One of the best travel books of the last few decades. . . . [an] exquisitely written and immensely entertaining book about the South and its storytellers." ―Thomas Swick, author of The Joys of Travel: And Stories That Illuminate Them
"Sitting Up with the Dead serves up an entertaining array of humorous and heartwarming portraits from the American South, both real and fictional. It shines a light on our incomparable storytelling, giving the told story the place of honor it deserves." Jimmy Neil Smith, Founder of the National Storytelling Festival, Founder and President Emeritus of the International Storytelling Center
An innovative and entertaining mapping of an area of the country that is, well, storied for its stories. . . . Petro has a journalist’s eye for detail and a good professor’s way with exegesis and that makes Sitting Up with the Dead much more than just an anthology of colorful stories. This is a book that honors stories and storytelling and reminds us that we all have our tales to tell.” Raleigh News & Observer
Pamela Petro is an adventurous, inquisitive writer who brings a perfect balance of reverence and scrutiny to her subject, and in Sitting Up with the Dead she has created a literary feast that is both delicious and nutritious.” Associated Press (reprinted in 42 papers)
Petro has a confident narrative voice, a wry sense of humor, and a gift for description. Reading Sitting Up with the Dead, is like joining friends around a campfire, savoring each tale like a sticky, gooey s’more.” New Orleans Times-Picayune
The genius of Sitting Up with the Dead is the sense of riding shotgun on a road trip with someone smart and funny. . . . Pamela Petro proves herself as gifted a storyteller as any of her subjects.” Women’s Review of Books
Petro drops most pretensions or analysis, staves off most stereotypes, and simply allows herself to sit on the porch and listen to the cultivated storytellers. . . . Her journey and recounting of selected stories from traditional ghost characters like Ray Hicks to hip African-American recording artist/storytellers like Veronica Byrd form a map to a South beyond our imagination.” Bloomsbury Review
The result of Petro’s journeys is this delightful sampling of folklore and an introduction to the many voices of the South today. . . . the book is like a trip back home for those who grew up in storytelling families. For those who never experienced that pleasure, it’s an eyeopening look at an oral art form that is still alive and well.” Library Journal
[A]n impressive piece of cultural conservation . . . In searching out these speakers, Petro discovers her own voice.” Publishers Weekly
Ms. Petro has captured the essence of the Southern oral tradition and renders it faithfully for the uninitiated.” Richmond Times-Dispatch
Pamela Petro offers a richly layered view of the American South, refracted through the region’s great tradition of oral storytelling. Her chorus of voices cuts across centuries and continents, knitting together time and space, Europe and Africa and these American States, into a most unusual and fascinating narrative.” Andrea Barrett, author of Servants of the Map, Ship Fever and Voyage of the Natural
With a fresh perspective and rich sense of humor, Pamela Petro takes the reader on a journey that maps the South with many of the distinctive voices of the region. Her writing has a sense of immediacy and adventure that makes you feel as if you’re taking the trip with her, and you’re glad for such company.” Shay Youngblood, author of Black Girl in Paris, Soul Kiss, and The Big Mama Stories
Don’t be misled by the title: Sitting Up with the Dead is a very lively book. Pamela Petro combines her curiosity about the South with her ability to look, listen, and remember as she records a refreshingly different tour of the South using native storytellers as her guides. She doesn’t just write about storytellers she is one!” Kathryn T. Windham, storyteller and author of 13 Ghosts and Jeffrey, Twice Blessed, and Encounters
Essential reading for anyone who loves stories and storytelling. Pamela Petro has collected a whole gamut of wonderfully told Southern tales capturing the spirit of oral storytelling. Seeking out some of our most colorful storytellers in their homes, she offers, through her portraits of them, insight into their lives, their stories, and the rich cultural heritage of the South.” David Holt, storyteller and musician
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