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Dead Snakes Hanging on a Fence to Bring Rain Books
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Diane, "Miss Scarlett"
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Feb 06, 2015 02:36PM

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"The World Made Straight" (also by Ron Rash)


Since I worked primarily with the elderly, I occasionally would ask one of my patients if they had ever heard that expression. I did meet one person and they had a Canadian background similar to my Mom's I believe though I don't remember if it was the same province. (and I think something other than peaches were jarred :))

Sue wrote: "oops....I thought this was a spot for odds and ends of phrases. Didn't realize it was supposed to be book titles. Oh well."
Seems like there's room here for both.
Seems like there's room here for both.
Diane wrote: "It's officially changed now. Any old country sayings or practices are fodder."
That's how you swing a one-eyed cat!
That's how you swing a one-eyed cat!

My grandmother used to say, Well, doesn't that just jar your pickles.

That's how you swing a one-eyed cat!"
Debbie wrote: "Sue wrote: "My mother's phrase, in lieu of any strong language, was "Wouldn't that jar your grandmother's peaches."
My grandmother used to say, Well, doesn't that just jar your pickles."
That's really close. Amazing how creative folks would get to avoid cursing!
John wrote: "go get me that chingadera
and then, Go pound sand"
Don't let your mama hear you saying that south of the border.
and then, Go pound sand"
Don't let your mama hear you saying that south of the border.

Page 110, "Burning Bright and Other Stories" by our man Ron Rash. It is actually in the title story itself...
"The road forked and as Marcie passed Holcombe Pruitt's place she saw a black snake draped over a barbed-wire fence, put there because the older farmers believed it would bring rain. Her father had called it a silly superstition when she was a child, but during a drought nearly as bad as this one, her father had killed a black snake himself and placed it on a fence, then follow him to his knees and his scorched cornfield, imploring whatever entity would listen to bring rain."

this gave me a good chuckle

The Little Friend
A Feast of Snakes
A Land More Kind Than Home
The Plague of Doves
There is one I'm missing...whaddya got, Diane??


"The Devil's Dream" by Lee Smith is about a snake handling sect in the NC mountains. On a more personal note, my grandmother was a Primitive Baptist, and we loved to go to church with her on Saturday night to watch Reverend Bunn handle snakes, and some of the members spoke in tongues and danced and writhed all over the place. There was also a band. It was lively all right, and quite a show for us kids.


I love Donna Tartt's The Little Friend--great writing. But there's an interesting book (non-Fiction) by Dennis Covington. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1.... It's set in Scottsboro, Al where I used to live.

If you have read any of Erdrich's books, you know they are set in the Dakotas and involve characters who are descendants of native Americans. Her stories are not southern lit, but this one character meets some southerners while her husband travels his tent circuit (prior to the cult). They are snake handlers, and by golly - Marn ends up taking two snakes home with her! The book is kind of a collection of interlaced stories (although the blurb doesn't tell you that, so it seems disjointed) called The Plague of Doves. It is not the author's best effort, but I LOVED the sections about Marn and her hubby Billy Peace.
Anyway, it got me thinking - what other works of literature (or just dumb fiction) use snakes as some kind of creep-out factor or symbology? Here in the land of southern literature, it would seem our group would have a handle on that, but if a regional North Dakota author includes them, where else are they? I am not some kind of snake nut, but I don't have a phobia of them in real life, either. We seem to have a natural aversion to them, and it is pretty clever of authors to leverage that.
I built a Goodreads list to capture those titles. I'm not so interested in the non-fiction aspects of it, but how authors use the device to show how primitive, local beliefs still crop up during times of desperation or just to freak the reader out.
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/9...



Books mentioned in this topic
The Plague of Doves (other topics)The Little Friend (other topics)
A Feast of Snakes (other topics)
The Plague of Doves (other topics)
Ozark Magic and Folklore (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Louise Erdrich (other topics)Tim Gautreaux (other topics)