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Of love and dust,

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Book Overview

This is the story of Marcus: bonded out of jail where he has been awaiting trial for murder, he is sent to the Hebert plantation to work in the fields. There he encounters conflict with the overseer,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Hot & spicy Louisiana flava!

Marcus is the hot, new seasoning added to the quarters of the Hebert Plantation. He ain't staying long though. He got 'thangs to do' - wear flashy clothes, sweet talk women, and enjoy life. His ambitions are not far beyond his reach. The only thing standing in Marcus' way is Bonbon, the Cajun overseer who rides a black stallion in the fields by day and a black filly in the quarters by night (Pauline). Jim is a great storyteller in this novel as he tells what he sees, hears and thinks. His narration gives readers a firsthand account of the people, their vernacular and surroundings in the quarters. He makes you fan with others battling the flies and hot, humid weather, squint as the dust flies, and laugh during some of their juke joint gatherings. He even makes you feel their longings of love at night. As the story climaxes, there is a great hush over the quarters. Sshh... keep reading. Jim concludes the story with a dramatic showdown that brings to bear the agony of all Pointe Coupee, Louisiana residents. Ernest Gaines blends his down-home plantation experiences with cajun seasonings and brews an excellent tale. The dialogue is superb and the repetitions for emphasis, I loved this book... I loved this book! I look forward to venturing to the Bayou through other novels by Gaines.

Dust in the Wind

Of Love and Dust / 0-679-75248-X When a young black man is forced to work on a white man's farm to "work off" his prison sentence, he astonishes his more moderate peers by refusing to accept the situation as the white society has defined for him. Rather than capitulate, accept the situation, and make the best of it, he chafes under the instructions and cruelties of the landowner, even though his stubborn refusal causes him more pain and fatigue than acceptance would. Our narrator is at first surprised, and then horrified, as the rebellious young man continues to rebel even to the point of seducing the landowner's white wife, and running off with her in the middle of the night. Racial relations are explored carefully in Gaines' novels, and Of Love and Dust is no exception. The white landowner is not evil - he is friendly to the narrator, and he has a relationship with one of the women who lives on his land. He loves the woman dearly, and they have two children together. However, he does not realize that his position of privilege still puts his friends and lovers at a great disadvantage - his lover does not have the freedom to refuse him; his friend does not have the choice to decline his company. Similarly, the young black protagonist is no angel - he is rude to the narrator and either brushes aside his attempts to make the young man more comfortable or accepts these attempts haughtily, as his due. His seduction of the quiet, insecure lady of the house starts out as merely an act of revenge, but blossoms into a kind of rough-edged love. Like all of Gaines' novels, there are no easy answers, but here there are not even easy questions. The young man is, at best, guilty of manslaughter. Some penance should be made, either in prison or at work, but he is not remorseful. It does not seem right that the black prison members should be sent out to work white-owned fields, but the produce is necessary and needed, and the prisoners are at least given more freedoms than they would have in prison - on the plantation, there is access to women, and other luxuries. We understand that this situation is very wrong, but it is unclear how it can be fixed, and perhaps this answer is hidden in the title - only love and time can remedy this situation.

Another compelling novel from one of America's best writers

One of Ernest Gaines' greatest talents lies in his ability to make the reader reconsider initial assumptions and prejudices about the characters in his stories. "Of Love and Dust" introduces us to Marcus, a young African-American man awaiting trial for the murder of another man. Apparently more concerned about his flashy wardrobe than the moral burden he should bear for his crime, Marcus quickly alienates much of the black community he enters when he goes to work on a Louisiana plantation owned by the white man who put up his bail. Often disrespectful of those who offer him advice out of concern for his well-being, in the beginning he comes across as a two-bit punk. But soon his actions catch us in a moral crossfire. On one hand, we admire him because he refuses to kowtow to the racist customs that defined life in the South in the 1940s. On the other hand, however, he shows no respect or sympathy for the deep-set fear that pervades the plantation community, whose members know they will all suffer the violent consequences if anyone tries to turn the caste system on its head. (Gaines' descriptions of that fear make it almost palpable.)The story takes off when, pushed to the limit by Bonbon, the plantation's Cajun overseer, Marcus is consumed by a quest for revenge. Marcus' first attempt to emasculate Bonbon comes with his unsuccessful seduction of Pauline, Bonbon's African-American mistress and the mother of two of his children. Rebuffed, Marcus turns his attention to Bonbon's white wife, Louise, a lonely and spiritless young woman who seeks from Marcus the love and attention her husband has saved for Pauline. As the tale moves inexorably toward its predictable conclusion, Gaines adds to the dimension of the characters, gradually revealing how their actions have been influenced -- or even orchestrated -- by powers beyond their control. "Me and you -- what we is?" asks Bonbon. "We little people...They make us do what they want us to do, and they don't tell us nothing. We don't have nothing to say 'bout it, do we?" Our initial black-and-white assumptions dissolve to gray, and we begin to view with greater sympathy the people caught up in conflict between their greatest desires and the restrictions of society. Even under pressure from insurmountable external powers, however, those people still rebel, in small or great ways, affirming their humanity, their spirit of independence, and their love for one another.

Excellent, just like all of Gaines' novels great read

Gaines has done it again. He has once again captured the spiritof the Southern Black Male. He like Alice Walker (who captures theSouthern woman) captures his characters spirit and their soul. He is an excellent writer. This book is great, it is easy reading and it addresses the hypocrisy of social and class standings like no other writer I have ever read. I have read four of Gaines' novels and all of them leave me breatless. I always want more even when the book is over. I am now about to read Bloodline and I can't wait. Mr. Gaines if you are reading this, PLEASE KEEP WRITING YOU ARE THE GREATEST!!!!!!!

An all around good novel

"Of Love And Dust" is a page-turning, please don't bother me can't you see that I'm reading books. By the author of "A Lesson Before Dying", "Of Love And Dust" is a story that takes place on plantation in 1948 in Louisana. The story is narrated by Jim Kelly, a black man that drives the tractor, and he tells the story of what happened when a young man named Marcus, who is awaiting trial for murder is "bonded" to the plantation to work. Marcus soon bumps head with Sidney BonBon, the cajun overseer, and plots revenge against him by trying to seduce Bonbon's black mistress, Pauline and Bonbon's wife, Louise. Told in the smooth, flowing, yet powerful style that is expected from Gaines, the novel is about the relationships and social interactions between the races and what happened when some dares to follow their hearts and break from tradition or standards that are socially acceptable. One of the things, and there are many, that I loved about this novel is that there is a good deal of humor. It is definitely a book to read.
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