Kim Richardson
Fiction 2019 | 320 pages
(I do not know how to put two photos in my blog, so I am leaving the book cover out and using this photo of the Fugate family instead).
The truth: The Blue Fugates were a family from Eastern Kentucky, notably recognized for their blue skin, a genetic condition passed down over generations. The peculiar story of the Fugate family begins with a French orphan named Martin Fugate. In 1820, Fugate claimed a land grant in Eastern Kentucky on the banks of Troublesome Creek. He, and four of his seven children, were blue. They married and had children, and the number of blue people in eastern Kentucky grew.
The blue-skinned Kentuckians existed for 200 years, until modern science discovered the genetic reason. The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek is historical fiction. The story, the characters are fiction, but the contextual facts are true.
And what a delightful story this is! Not only did I fall in love with our main character, Cussy Mary (aka "Bluet"), but the writing thrilled me. Cussy Marie is 19 years old for much of our story, which takes place in 1936. She is a "book woman." She rides her mule Junia into the hills five days a week, delivering books, magazines, and other reading materials to extremely poor and very remote homesteads. She is also "colored" by the definition of that time, and experiences all the disrespect and brutality of those times. She lives alone with her father, who is dying from the grim, sad, and ubiquitous employment in Kentucky, coal mining.
I had many examples of the writing that tickled my inner logophile. Here is a short one. "Junia raised her upper lip and nibbled the breeze with tall, talking teeth." (End of chapter six). I love the visual!
There is a sequel; I intend to read it.
Yes, certainly, read this novel. You will be glad.
October 2023
I also recommend this book. It’s a rich, rewarding, multi-layered story.
Those are good words to describe this book, Mary!