home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Book Review
- Copyright (c) 1994, Steve Powers
- All rights reserved
-
-
- Billy - Albert French (Viking, $19.00).
-
- Once in a great while, out of the many books that an avid reader reads,
- a novel will come along that burns itself into the mind with images that
- are hard to shake. So it is with Billy.
-
- The final scenes of Albert French's first novel are almost a physical
- slap in the face, so horrifyingly bleak are they.
-
- Told entirely in a regional, Mississippi dialect, Billy is based on a
- true incident that happened nearly sixty years ago. The imagery is
- powerful and evocative; it's not hard to see the hot, dusty town of
- Banes, to feel the scorching summer sun of 1937 and to sense the utter
- bleakness of the unrelenting poverty that saturates the
- characters'lives. The setting, the framework only serves to emphasize
- the shocking injustice of the climax of Billy.
-
- Billy is a ten-year old black boy who, with his friend Gumpy, has a
- fateful encounter with two white girls who harass them, an encounter
- that ends with Billy killing one of the girls with a pocket knife.
-
- Events move swiftly after this, with Billy standing trial as an adult
- and being sentenced to die in the electric chair. The very last scene,
- contrasting a young boy who only wants to go home to his mother with the
- shocking image of the electric chair that awaits him is one of the most
- heart-wrenching descriptions I have ever read.
-
- Read this novel carefully; the images may stay for a long time.
-
-