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A Place in American Letters


Article # : 14376 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 6 / 1988  3,233 Words
Author : Clyde Wilson
Clyde Wilson is a professor of history at the University of South Carolina and the author or editor of over thirty books on American history and literature.

       UDERSTANDING MARY LEE SETTLE
       George Garrett
       University of South Carolina Press, 1988
       187 pp., $19.95
       
        One useful way to distinguish between types of novelists is to characterize them as either intensive or extensive. An intensive novel, much the more common variety in modern times, deals with a small segment of individual experience and consciousness, wringing from it the maximum psychological meaning. Though it may encompass intensive experiences, an extensive novel, more common in earlier times, paints with a broad brush and achieves social and historical complexity.
       
        When a writer does both of these things at a high level, and can even combine them successfully into a seamless whole, then one begins to think in terms of "great" and "enduring." This characterization fits Faulkner, Conrad, Hardy, Dostoyevski, and Solzhenitsyn. And, according to the novelist and poet George Garrett, our relatively unknown contemporary American and Southern writer, Mary Lee Settle, will, in the long view, find a place in this company.
       
        Compared with other writers
       
        Writing of Settle's The Beulah Quintet, which makes up the largest part, but by no means all, of her work, Garrett says, "No other serious American novelist of Settle's generation--that generation which came to literary prominence in the years following World War II--has chosen to attempt anything so large and ambitious.... Settle's remarkable accomplishment ... (1994 of 19649 Characters)
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