Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Ruby by Cynthia Bond Ruby by Cynthia Bond Review – a Survivor's Story of Love, Madness and Satanism

Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Ruby by Cynthia Bond Ruby by Cynthia Bond Review – a Survivor's Story of Love, Madness and Satanism

Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Ruby by Cynthia Bond Ruby by Cynthia Bond review – a survivor's story of love, madness and Satanism. “H ell, ain’t nothing strange when Colored go crazy. Strange is when we don’t,” remarks a character in Cynthia Bond’s new novel, Ruby. And yet the people of Liberty Township in east Texas attribute the “howling, half-naked” madness of the title character to her own sins and travels, both a comeuppance for her preternatural beauty and an active choice. The locals never for a second stop to consider that Ruby Bell, the haunted, fatherless child of a light-skinned, red-haired woman, might have been shaped by the grinding weight of history. As Bond constructs that history over the 330 pages, we feel just how heavy it is. Before Ruby is even born, her aunt is shot and killed by the sheriff’s deputies for relenting to a married white man’s demands. As soon as Ruby is born, Ruby’s mother leaves her caramel-skinned baby girl and flees the rapes and ropes of the south to reinvent herself as a white woman in New York City. As a young child, with no adult protectors and only her friend Maggie to watch over her, Ruby is sent away and made to do horrifying things for pocket change. She keeps her lips numb and her eyes empty. Ruby by Cynthia Bond. In 1950, Ruby makes her escape to New York, “where Colored girls and White pretended to be equal”, to look for her mother. And while she wears Chanel perfume, loses a bit of her east Texas accent, and receives a conspiratorial wink from James Baldwin, the big city is almost as cruel to her as the small town had been. A telegram calls her home in 1963, right as hundreds are flocking north to the March on Washington. “Like a lone salmon Ruby had taken the road south,” which is where we find her when the novel begins, living on her family’s land and talking to invisible spirits. She has completely unraveled. Many will compare Ruby to the work of Toni Morrison or Zora Neale Hurston, as Oprah Winfrey has. (She’s chosen it as the fourth selection in her Book Club 2.0.) Ruby’s scenes of satanism and sexual abuse also evoke HBO’s True Detective, which is set in nearby Louisiana and has quite a few details in common with a true story. A few plot points might be similar, but Bond recounts the events from the perspective of a survivor who relives them every day, not an outside investigator cushioned by time and distance. The effect is profoundly different. It may be most apt to compare Bond to Gabriel García Márquez. Ruby is woven with magical realism. The roots of the pines and branches of the chinaberry tree and circling crows and gleaming white lay angel cake are far more than scenery and props: they are plot. In Ruby , the supernatural and the natural are knotted together, so that it’s hardly necessary to explain how each demon is created by ghastly human actions. It takes a people intimately familiar with the evil of which men are capable to believe in a true and present Satan. And so even the most pious churchgoers in Liberty Township salt the corners of their home to ward off haints, or ghostly lost souls. More than once, Ruby herself is called a haint. She is a still-living reminder that the horrors of the past are not dead. A plot this heavy usually risks tipping into melodrama, but Bond’s luminous prose is grounded in a sure reality. Bond, like her novel’s eponymous heroine, was born in east Texas. Her aunt, too, was murdered by a Klan-affiliated sheriff and his deputies. Bond, too, was a victim of sex trafficking. Like Ruby, she sought out a life in the city – in her case, New York, Chicago and now Los Angeles, where she works with at-risk youth. At age 53, this is Bond’s first novel, and it took her more than a decade to complete. “Writing Ruby,” she says in a Q&A appended to the book, “became my salvation.” Ruby finds her salvation – or perhaps, more accurately, the path to it – in Ephram Jennings, the son of an evil-spirited preacher and his northern- born wife who “ripped out the seams of her own dreams and patched them into his”. Both of Ephram’s parents meet tragic ends: his mother has a breakdown and is shipped off to a mental hospital after discovering the truth about her husband, who is himself lynched by white men a few years later. Young Ephram bears witness to both events, and is raised by his sister Celia, a hard-edged woman of God with whom he lives for the next three decades, calling her “mama”. The celibate routine of weekdays spent bagging groceries at the Piggly Wiggly and Sundays spent in church cannot erase the childhood memory of a supernatural sliver of an afternoon with Ruby. When he sees her in the local market, 13 years after her departure for New York, he recognizes her instantly. And he continues to see her even as she lets the crazy envelop her completely and the rest of the town goes blind to her. In this way, Ruby is a love story about pure-hearted patience conquering insurmountable odds. A lifetime of abuse has taught Ruby that “men were a slight discord that she waited to pass”, and so Ephram must prove his devotion to her. He must then defend it in front of the entire town – which might be slow to see, but is quick to judge. When he stands up for Ruby, whose decade of erratic behaviour has compounded her childhood reputation as a vessel for all of the evil swirling through the community, a churchgoer scolds Ephram: “You sound like you been batter-dipped and fried in wrongfulness.” Even he questions his commitment to a woman who has survived the unsurvivable as he is pulled deeper into her world: “Maybe crazy was a cold you caught.” Bond reveals slowly, over the course of the novel, that the women deemed crazy in Liberty Township are the women who acknowledge the dual blunt forces of racism and sexism in their lives, and come to realize just how difficult it is to rise above them. In that sense, perhaps crazy is contagious. Once they recognize such injustice and decide to face it, they challenge those around them to see it, too. Ruby is published in the US by Hogarth, priced $12.50, and in the U K by Two Roads for £7.99 (available for £6.39 from the Guardian Bookshop). Ruby Summary Cynthia Bond. Everything you need to understand or teach Ruby by Cynthia Bond. Ruby Summary & Study Guide. Ruby Summary. “Ruby” is an African-American historical-fantasy by Cynthia Bond. The story recounts the relationship between Ruby Bell, a woman considered to be crazy, and Ephram Jennings, a man considered weak and worthless by a town with dark secrets. The novel begins in 1974. Ephram is a lifelong resident of Liberty Township in East Texas. He has known Ruby since she was a child. He knows that she lived in New York for several. Summary and book reviews of Ruby by Cynthia Bond. The epic, unforgettable story of a man determined to protect the woman he loves from the town desperate to destroy her—this beautiful and devastating debut heralds the arrival of a major new voice in fiction. Ephram Jennings has never forgotten the beautiful girl with the long braids running through the piney woods of Liberty, their small East Texas town. Young Ruby, "the kind of pretty it hurt to look at," has suffered beyond imagining, so as soon as she can, she flees suffocating Liberty for the bright pull of 1950s New York. Ruby quickly winds her way into the ripe center of the city--the darkened piano bars and hidden alleyways of the Village--all the while hoping for a glimpse of the red hair and green eyes of her mother. When a telegram from her cousin forces her to return home, thirty-year-old Ruby Bell finds herself reliving the devastating violence of her girlhood. With the terrifying realization that she might not be strong enough to fight her way back out again, Ruby struggles to survive her memories of the town's dark past. Meanwhile, Ephram must choose between loyalty to the sister who raised him and the chance for a life with the woman he has loved since he was a boy. Full of life, exquisitely written, and suffused with the pastoral beauty of the rural South, Ruby is a transcendent novel of passion and courage. This wondrous page-turner rushes through the red dust and gossip of Main Street, to the pit fire where men swill bootleg outside Bloom's Juke, to Celia Jennings's kitchen where a cake is being made, yolk by yolk, that Ephram will use to try to begin again with Ruby. Utterly transfixing, with unforgettable characters, riveting suspense, and breathtaking, luminous prose, Ruby offers an unflinching portrait of man's dark acts and the promise of the redemptive power of love. Wishbone Chapter 1. Ruby Bell was a constant reminder of what could befall a woman whose shoe heels were too high. The people of Liberty Township wove her into cautionary tales of the wages of sin and travel. They called her buck-crazy.

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