Friday, April 10, 2026

The Books Briefing: The Writers Who Can’t Let Go of the South

That is an version of the Books Briefing, our editors’ weekly information to one of the best in books. Join it right here.

Rising up, the novelist and New Orleans native Nancy Lemann didn’t know the way culturally distinct her house metropolis was. “I simply thought, Okay, that is what it’s like. That is what life is like,” she informed my colleague Kaitlyn Tiffany, who spoke with Lemann for an article about her first novel in a long time, The Oyster Diaries. “However the minute I left and went up north”—to attend Brown College, in Rhode Island—“I simply realized, Oh my God, I’ve this ace in my again pocket.” She noticed that the small print of her youth might gas a complete writing profession, and so they have: Of her 5 novels, just one has a major character who just isn’t from New Orleans. (That stated, she is from Alabama.)

First, listed below are 5 tales from The Atlantic’s Books part:

Southern experiences and traditions could be deeply compelling, even unique, to People who stay in different areas. In literature, the South can appear to signify the inaccessible previous—both as a backward society beholden to outdated traditions or, alternatively, as an Eden uncorrupted by the march of modernity. In genres as different as true crime, gothic horror, historic fiction, and memoir, it could function a purpose-built metaphor—the gorgeous facade that conceals a darkish, bloody previous. But none of those portrayals absolutely explains why the South is so fascinating, and why we southerners carry it in our again pocket all over the place we go.

Maybe the reply lies with a selected set of sensory and social experiences. For instance, when Katherine Anne Porter remembered her late-Nineteenth-century childhood in Texas in a 1975 Atlantic article, she unfurled a scroll of photos most People will immediately acknowledge. Porter conjures her grandmother’s lengthy, shaded porches; honeysuckle and mint juleps; the Natchez Hint; church revivals; thoroughbred horses; cities with no radios or televisions; the juice of peaches and grapes. Amongst these idyllic recollections, Porter throws in additional difficult reminiscences—a Black nurse her household had as soon as enslaved, a poor Mexican household that was kicked out of a revival—basically with out remark, as if these have been immovable realities of the world.

Porter was embellishing her previous; she was an incurable fabulist who turned an impoverished childhood right into a glamorous old-money upbringing. But the clichés she invokes are actual. Kids do run round on humid nights catching lightning bugs; Spanish moss does drip from bushes, and kudzu does coat utility poles; church teachings (and gossip) do strictly outline morality; individuals do say—and count on—sirs and I’ves.

Maybe People from elsewhere acknowledge these regionalisms so simply as a result of, as Imani Perry has argued, the area is directly distinct from the dominant tradition and essential to its growth. When Perry wrote an Atlantic article accumulating nice books in regards to the South, she famous that “any trustworthy rendering of who we’re as a nation requires us to grasp how a lot of our nationwide abundance has relied on southern land and labor, and what number of of our tastes and pleasures have relied on southern folks.”

Lemann, in that spirit, is all the time writing about how different locations evaluate to New Orleans. As Tiffany notes, New York reminds Lemann a little bit of house, however Washington, D.C., close to the place she (and the protagonist of The Oyster Diaries) lives, doesn’t. And why not measure the remainder of the nation in opposition to the South, for as soon as? New Orleans was based a long time earlier than D.C., and even the USA; outlined by intermingling cultures and inventive innovation, in addition to brutal enslavement, it held all of the younger nation’s contradictions in a single place. I grew up outdoors Nashville, the buckle of the Bible Belt, and in the present day, my cultural inheritance—nation music, evangelical politics, sizzling rooster—is principally mainstream. Like Porter and Lemann, I’ll most likely be dedicated to the South, not less than creatively, for all times. Possibly that simply makes me American.


H. J. Harvey / Library of Congress / Getty

A Author of ‘Hypnotic Repetition’

By Kaitlyn Tiffany

Together with her first new novel in additional than 20 years, Nancy Lemann returns, but once more, to New Orleans and its eccentricities.

Learn the complete article.


What to Learn

Energy to Damageby Darcy O’Brien

O’Brien, the son of Hollywood actors, had a knack for turning lurid crimes of the kind you may discover on Dateline or 20/20 into one thing akin to artwork, and Energy to Damage is his crowning achievement. Revealed in 1996, the guide follows Vivian Forsythe, a divorced younger mom from Dyersburg, Tennessee, who, in a stroke of unimaginably terrible luck, applies to work for native Decide David Lanier. Lanier rapes Forsythe throughout a job interview, which O’Brien recounts in upsetting, unwavering element. Afterward, Forsythe tells nobody in regards to the assault as a result of Lanier and his brother, the native district legal professional, successfully management the county. However ultimately Forsythe and Lanier’s different victims—and there are numerous, she discovers—meet an FBI agent and work collectively to convey down the outdated decide, a marketing campaign that takes the higher a part of a decade and involves contain the U.S. Supreme Court docket. Energy to Damage is in the end much less a true-crime guide than a post-crime guide through which victims summon radical braveness to confront a monster.  — Jared Sullivan

From our record: Seven true tales that learn like thrillers


Out Subsequent Week

📚 Jan Morris: A Lifeby Sara Wheeler

📚 The Witchby Marie NDiaye

📚 On Consuming: The Making and Unmaking of My Appetitesby Alicia Kennedy


Your Weekend Learn

And (fka Kanye West)
Illustration by The Atlantic. Supply: Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty.

Ye Needs Your Forgiveness. So What?

By Spencer Kornhaber

Making judgment calls about public hurt could be difficult, and the method is muddied by the forgiveness-focused language that guidelines a lot of the dialog about superstar conduct. Ye’s redemption marketing campaign has foregrounded a theme that matches our parasocial zeitgeist: empathy for the person. But whereas many people might want Ye to get higher, or consider he’s entitled to private redemption, none of us has any actual thought what’s in his coronary heart. All we have now is the report of how he’s acted earlier than, and all we will do is make inferences about how he’s performing now.

Learn the complete article.


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