
Pale
A Novel
Author: Edward A. Farmer
Narrator: Stephanie Weeks
Unabridged: 8 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/19/2020

Author: Edward A. Farmer
Narrator: Stephanie Weeks
Unabridged: 8 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/19/2020
Edward A. Farmer is a native of Memphis, Tennessee, where he journaled and cultivated stories his entire childhood. He is a graduate of Amherst College with a degree in English and psychology, and recipient of the MacArthur-Leithauser Travel Award for creative writing. He currently lives and writes in Pasadena, California. Pale is his first novel.
The language in this book is very descriptive, offering a tender look at individuals working in a house on a plantation in Mississippi. Edward A. Farmer describes things poetically, paying close attention to the environment as much as he does the characters. He makes objects like the house and cicad......more
Edward Farmer's engrossing debut, Pale, begins in 1966 in the burning heat of Mississippi, when Bernice, whose husband left with all their savings and didn't return, accepts her brothers invitation to join him in working on a cotton plantation. She is slowly immersed into a household full of secrets......more
“[Farmer] excels at atmosphere, using the oppressive heat of summer, the heaviness of the night sky, the sound of the wind through the cotton, and the isolation of the plantation to deepen the feeling of melancholy…Recommended for readers who like quiet, character-driven novels.” Historical Novels Review
“Pale is such a wonderfully written book. From the wonderful, well-rounded characters to the very descriptive setting and story, I could not help but feel as if I were in the story itself…I could not help but enjoy the journey that the book brought me on, and in a way, I couldn’t help but feel like I learned something new about an era of American history that is often overlooked.” Portland Book Review
“Secrets and revenge haunt a Mississippi plantation in Pale, the potent debut novel…Readers will hang on each page, just as Bernice feels bound to stay until the story is done. This intergenerational story of racism, patriarchy, and vengeance is one that will not soon be forgotten.” Shelf Awareness (starred review)
“The book’s poetic yet forthright prose has been compared to the work of Ernest Gaines. It’s an evocative debut for a novelist who surely has a promising career ahead of him.” Augusta Chronicle
“The plot and writing are evocative of the work of the late Ernest Gaines; it’s a story simply and directly told, and by that simplicity and directness it exposes familial cruelties and kindnesses in equal measure. This is a promising beginning for a writer who, whether he realizes it or not, continues a rich and lyrical narrative tradition. A beautiful first novel.” Library Journal (starred review)
“Farmer’s debut captures the delicate and dangerous lose-lose reality of a person in Bernice’s position…Farmer opens with cotton imagery and returns to it throughout, disallowing any visions of beautiful, puffy whiteness…The story’s rewards and Bernice’s experience are important.” Booklist
“A beautifully wrought novel, with each character sensitively drawn, exposing the lasting effects of trauma.” John Copenhaver, author of Dodging and Burning
“His sumptuous prose creates an operatic vision of life on a cotton plantation in 1960s Mississippi, a world on the cusp of great change that many of its characters resist with all their power.” May-lee Chai, author of Useful Phrases for Immigrants
“The evil of intergenerational racism is revealed by the preference to live in a quicksand of hatred, to choose slow vengeance over breaking free.” Laila Ibrahim, author of Yellow Crocus
“There are perhaps a hundred ways to tell this story; the one Farmer chooses is striking for its patience. He allows his novel to germinate, to uncurl its stalk and lift its head to the sky, then swell into a white, menacing bloom…Pale is an explosion in very slow motion, and what slows it down is powerful, lyrical language…The lover of literary craft will especially savor Farmer’s mastery over point of view.” Amherst magazine