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Like Eva's cellmate, Elvira, we are at once fascinated and repelled by Eva's crime and her tortured life that drove her to commit it. Gayl Jones makes us feel all Eva's pain and her disgust and horror at the men who used her and treated her with such contempt. Eva was a walking time bomb; we can only wonder that she didn't explode earlier. But murder doesn't ease Eva's pain, and there's no escape for her. Lonely and devastated, Eva needs love like any other human being, but love is something she'll never find; instead, she's stuck in a cell with Elvira, who is as predatory as the men on the outside who ruined her life. Eva has survived, but at a devastating cost; she's become one of the walking dead.
In 177 spare pages, Jones paints a convincing portrait of a soul so damaged that even the gift of a comb would be an unhoped-for kindness. "Eva's Man" is a short book but it's not easy to get through; Jones slices back and forth between time and place, mirroring Eva's fractured, fissured life. It's a tough, gritty, no-holds-barred book by a uniquely gifted novelist.
This was a hard read both emotionally and physically. Jones takes liberties with time and detail jumping back and forth in the story and slowly giving the reader the complete picture of Eva's life. I had to read and re-read chapters for fear of missing crucial detail.
What the reader is left with is a glimpse into the mind of a fractured woman unable to love for fear of being victimized. What Eva chooses to do instead is assume the role of the victimizer and take extreme control of her own sexuality by killing her lover.
Within the pages of this horror story, Jones mananges to give Eva a language and image that is brutal, honest, sadistic and frail. If ever there was a complicated anti-hero in modern fiction, here she is.
I didn't come away from the novel with praise or pity for Eva, but her story is one that has stayed in my mind months after finishing the book.
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Jones reveals a rich knowledge of the culture, plants, and animals of the Southwest in this work. At times, I felt like I was reading a Tex-Mex Spanish primer.
This book is lenghty and unless you are a graduate of Evelyn Wood's speed reading course, you will need a few days to absorb its contents. However, the plot is interesting and the characters, particularly Mosquito, are well developed.
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Although Ursa had a black father, she resembles the Portuguese Corregidora. Her light skin and fine hair causes her to be ostracized by black women and desired by black men. She expresses her lifelong frustrations in the form of song and has moderate success as a blues singer in the small local club circuit. Ursa finds herself suffering emotionally, verbally, and physically at the whim of her husband, Mutt, who begins to exhibit the same jealousy, possessiveness, and envy that her great-grandmother shared regarding her relationship with Corregidora.
Through flashbacks and internal memories, we understand Ursa's mental anguish when trying to discern between the painful slave legacy and her present day household situation. True to the mindset of the time, a woman's childbearing ability is looked upon as her only source of power and we see Ursa's torment further exacerbated when her ability to pass "the evidence" to her children is jeopardized.
This book addresses racism, slavery, and sexism on several different levels. Be warned-- it grips the reader from the beginning and goes deep in a very "Alice Walker-ish" kind of way. I experienced difficulty following the dialogue at times but I hung in there and relied on inference to follow the author's insinuations; and despite this one 'snag', I was not disappointed with Ms. Jones's first novel. This is a short but complex read; it is not for everyone, however I found it was a worthwhile literary departure from the "norm."
Reviewed by Phyllis
APOOO BookClub
April 4, 2003