French Quarter Journal
  • Home
    • Around the Block
    • Barstool Astrology
    • Behind the Scenes
    • Boho Back Pages
    • The Eyes Have It
    • Full Plate
    • Hunkering Down
    • It's a Living
    • Lit Life
    • Passing a Good Time
    • Personalities
    • Quarter Beats
    • Quarter Notes
    • Rainbow History
    • Sketchbook
    • Stanzas
    • Storyboard
    • Transformations
    • What's in Store
  • About
  • Sponsors
    • Reader Support
  • Archives
  • Krewe
Picture
                       

A rousing new anthology:  The Gulf South

4/21/2021

 
Lit Life - April 2021
Picture
​Bayou Cadet, looking out into the Mississippi Sound. Book review photos by Ellis Anderson

Even regional literary connoisseurs are likely to discover new favorites in the first powerhouse anthology of Gulf Coast environmental writing,  edited by Tori Bush and Richard Goodman.

- by John Sledge


In his elegiac 2007 book, Terra Incognita: Photographs of America’s Third Coast, Richard Sexton wrote that the long, gracefully curving shore between the Florida Keys and the Rio Grande “has eluded our national psyche.” He chalked this phenomenon up to the hell-for-leather obsession with manifest destiny, intent “on uniting the Atlantic seaboard and Pacific coast, while the Gulf Coast (the archetypal middle child) languished.”

Others have noted this neglect as well, none more effectively than environmental writer and historian Jack E. Davis, who declared in his Pulitzer Prize-winning 2017 book, The Gulf: The Making of an American Sea, that the region has been “wholly excluded from the central narrative of the American experience.” 

Davis’s genius was to inextricably link the Gulf’s prodigious natural environment to its human history and destiny. Eschewing “traditional historical narrative that leaves humans gamboling across unacknowledged landscapes,” Davis instead placed nature at the heart of his big book. Not simply a stage set, it became a “catalyst” that explained wars, economies, and settlement patterns.
​Davis extolled the Gulf’s “nourishing energy” and charted humankind’s tragic abuse of its natural abundance. The future, he warned, is potentially dire — overdevelopment, pollution, accelerating climate change, and sea level rise. 

​As Davis so clearly demonstrated, the Gulf is a critical national asset that should be treated with care and protected. The United States extracts a quarter of its natural gas and one sixth of its oil from the Gulf, claims 14 of the basin’s 19 major ports, harvests 1.4 billion pounds of seafood annually from its waters (20 percent of the total U.S. commercial fishery), and logs millions of recreational fishing trips a year. The five Gulf coastal states (Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas) boast surging beach tourism and overall growth rates two and a half times the national average.

​Unfortunately, as a business writer joked some years ago, when the region does get noticed it’s usually for its embarrassing politics and vulnerability to natural disasters.

Picture
Click here to purchase from your favorite indie bookstore
Picture
Tori Bush
Picture
Richard Goodman, photo by William Widmer

If the broader public does not appreciate the Gulf’s significance, it is certainly not due to a lack of books. There is plenty of good writing about the region available. But heretofore it never occurred to anyone to anthologize this material.  

Happily, two New Orleanians have rectified this oversight. Tori Bush, a doctoral candidate in English at Louisiana State University, and Richard Goodman, an associate professor of creative nonfiction writing at the University of New Orleans and author of French Dirt: The Story of a Garden in the South of France (2002), are the editors of a thoroughly enjoyable new work, The Gulf South: An Anthology of Environmental Writing (University Press of Florida). 

In their introduction, Bush and Goodman briefly examine the differences between environmental writing, “a mode in which writers and readers respond to the era’s environmental, social, and cultural crisis”; nature writing, a meditative endeavor that “does not necessarily depend on science, politics, or cultural contexts”; and ecocriticism, an academic enterprise that delves into how nature is handled in literature. While there is much overlap among these sister genres, the ultimate purpose of environmental writing is to “rouse the reader.”  

Picture

Their topic chosen and defined, the editors’ greatest challenge was what to include. To that end they polled more than 60 scientists, journalists, and scholars, and received over 300 recommendations. Since environmental writing is a relatively recent response to conditions in the Gulf South, the bulk of these suggestions dated from the 1920s forward.

Ultimately the editors settled on 40 pieces encompassing an incredibly rich sampling of fiction, nonfiction, reportage, poetry, and even a graphic novel, Josh Neufield’s A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge (2010). They included three late-19th-century samples in the mix, among them Lafcadio Hearn’s powerful 1889 novel Chita: A Memory of Last Island, to altogether salutatory effect.

Otherwise, the selections include Zora Neale Hurston (Their Eyes Were Watching God, 1937), William Faulkner (The Wild Palms, 1939), Marjory Stoneman Douglas (The Everglades: River of Grass, 1947), John McPhee (“Atchafalaya,” 1989), John Barry (Rising Tide, 1997), Oliver Houck (Down on the Batture, 2010), Jesmyn Ward (Salvage the Bones, 2011), Edward O. Wilson (Half-Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life, 2016), and Jack E. Davis, to name just a few.

​Storm, flood, and toxic corporations are recurrent themes, fulfilling the editors’ desire for pieces that “explore the changing culture between humans and the Gulf South environment.” Most of the writers one would expect are here, and almost half of them are women. 

Picture

That said, as with any such effort there are imbalances. Florida and Louisiana rate the most pieces, 10 for the former and 18 for the latter, with the Mississippi River and the Everglades looming large. Texas, owning 332 miles of coastline, scores just five selections, while Mississippi (44 miles) also gets five, and Alabama (32 miles) a paltry two.

Granted, Alabama’s coastline is the shortest, but the Mobile River delta is a natural wonder that inspired Edward O. Wilson, who dubbed it “an American Amazon.” It is also the subject of some fine journalism by former Mobile Register reporters Bill Finch and Ben Raines that richly deserves wider recognition.

Almost completely offstage throughout is the Gulf of Mexico itself.  A piece by Antonia Juhasz, “Thirty Million Gallons Under the Sea” (2015) takes the reader offshore and beneath the waves, and Jack E. Davis details the bays, rivers, and barrier islands encountered by the Spanish conquistadores Panfilo de Narváez and Cabeza de Vaca. Some authors whose inclusion would have injected a little more brine are Elizabeth Rush (Rising: Dispatches from the new American Shore, 2018), Archie Carr (The Windward Road, 1956), and Peter Jenkins (Along the Edge of America, 1995). 
None of this should detract from what is a solid effort. As the editors themselves note, “this is an anthology of environmental writing from the Gulf South, not the anthology.” Even Gulf Coast literary connoisseurs will likely discover new favorites in these pages, while those not already familiar with writers like John Barry and Jesmyn Ward are in for one hell of an introduction. 

Find more stories on French Quarter Journal's home page.  Subscribe to our free newsletter here. ​


Picture
John S. Sledge is senior architectural historian with the Mobile Historic Development Commission and a member of the National Book Critics Circle. He is the author of seven books, including “Southern Bound: A Gulf Coast Journalist on Books, Writers, and Literary Journeys of the Heart,” “The Mobile River,” and “The Gulf of Mexico: A Maritime History,” all from the University of South Carolina press. He and his editor wife, Lynn, live in Fairhope, Ala. ​


Appreciate French Quarter Journal? 
Your donations make our work possible:  ​​

Picture

Comments are closed.
    Picture
    Picture

    Prime Sponsors

    Picture

    Picture
    Clay Creations

    Picture
    Authement Iron Works

    Picture
    California Drawstrings

    Picture
    Voodoo Authentica

    Picture
    New Orleans Musicians' Clinic


    Archives

    January 2023
    December 2022
    August 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    September 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019

    Categories

    All
    Andrew Cominelli
    Architecture
    Around The Block
    Art
    Behind The Scenes
    Boho Back Pages
    Books
    Civics
    Darling
    Domicile
    Ellis Anderson
    Food
    Frank Perez
    Full Plate
    Game Day
    Gay Culture
    Grace Wilson
    Guest Columnists
    History
    Home & Garden
    It's A Living
    John Sledge
    Kerry Maloney
    Kim Ranjbar
    Kirsten Reneau
    Layth Sihan
    Libations
    Literature
    Lit Life
    Mardi Gras
    Margarita Bergen
    Michael Warner
    Music
    Nan Parati
    Passing A Good Time
    Personalities
    Photographers
    Poetry
    Publisher's Notes
    Quarter Beats
    Quarter Notes
    Rainbow History
    Reda Wigle
    Rheta Grimsley Johnson
    Richard Goodman
    Scott Naugle
    Sketchbook
    Southern Writers
    Stanzas
    Storyboard
    St. Peter Street Sketchbook
    The Eyes Have It
    Transformations
    What's In Store

    RSS Feed

French Quarter Journal is published by Ellis Anderson Media, LLC.   Unless otherwise attributed, all written content and photography copyright 2019 by Ellis Anderson Media, LLC.  By using this website you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.   
​
Interested in the Mississippi Gulf Coast?  Check out our sister publication, The Shoofly Magazine - Bay St. Louis Living
Picture

  • Home
    • Around the Block
    • Barstool Astrology
    • Behind the Scenes
    • Boho Back Pages
    • The Eyes Have It
    • Full Plate
    • Hunkering Down
    • It's a Living
    • Lit Life
    • Passing a Good Time
    • Personalities
    • Quarter Beats
    • Quarter Notes
    • Rainbow History
    • Sketchbook
    • Stanzas
    • Storyboard
    • Transformations
    • What's in Store
  • About
  • Sponsors
    • Reader Support
  • Archives
  • Krewe