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Boom and Doom in Atlanta


Article # : 14666 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1988  2,015 Words
Author : Monroe K. Spears
Monroe K. Spears is the author of American Ambitions, Dionysus and the City, and The Poetry of W.H. Auden. He was editor of the Sewanee Review from 1952 to 1961 and retired in 1986 as Moody Professor of English at Rice University.

       PEACHTREE ROAD
       Anne R. Siddons
       New York: Harper and Row, 1988
       566 pp., $18.95
       
       When this novel arrived, I looked, never having heard of its author, for external clues as to what kind of novel it was. The jacket describes it as "a powerful love story set against the turbulent history of Atlanta over the past four decades" and boasts of a 50,000-copy first printing and a $55,000 national marketing campaign. So far, all the signs point to a commercial product—not a serious novel but rather a serious business, seeking to capitalize perhaps on everything from the afterglow of Gone with the Wind to the current interest in Atlanta as the site of the Democratic convention.
       
       On the other hand, a poem by James Dickey is quoted as the book's epigraph, and Pat Conroy features prominently in the acknowledgements; both these sometime Atlantans are, though occasionally best sellers, certainly serious writers. It is promising, too, that an attempt is made promptly to exorcise the ghost of Margaret Mitchell. In the opening scene the narrator is describing Oakland Cemetery:
       "Lucy always swore that it was here that she and Red Chastain first made love, on top of Margaret Mitchell's grave, on a spring night after a Phi Chi dance when she was sixteen. 'I swear the earth moved, Gibby,' she said. 'Old Red thought it was his incomparable [f— — —] but I'm sure it was little old Peggy Mitchell applauding.' "
       This writer's aspirations go beyond the merely ... (1924 of 11898 Characters)
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