The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter
The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter is a 2016 novel by American playwright and author Kia Corthron. It won the 2016 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize.[1]
Author | Kia Corthron |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Historical fiction |
Publisher | Seven Stories Press |
Publication date | 26 January 2016 |
Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
Pages | 789 |
ISBN | 978-1-60980-657-6 |
Plot
The novel chronicles the lives and interactions of two sets of brothers: Eliot and Dwight in Maryland, and B.J. and Randall in Alabama. It begins in 1941, jumps to the late 1950s, and concludes with the climactic events in 1983, followed by an epilogue in 2010.
Development history
Corthron stated in a 2016 interview that she was inspired to begin the novel with the climactic event and drafted the novel in longhand.[2] Upon starting the novel in 2010,[3] she intended to have only one protagonist, but Corthron "realized [she] also wanted to know the story behind the other key person involved in the event ... and at last it became a book about brothers."[2] Corthron, then known for her work as a playwright, said before the novel was published "[the idea] was just so huge I felt that this just couldn't fit into [a play,] a two-hour experience. Not necessarily more important, but just bigger."[4]
So, while I have loved many of the characters of my plays, it did not go as deep as my feelings for my novel protagonists. As a matter of fact, I was completely taken unawares one day when I realized I was in love with one of the protagonists of my novel. I did not expect that, and it's never happened with a play! And those feelings manifested themselves not even halfway through the book – and got more intense as I kept writing!
— Kia Corthron, 2016 interview[2]
The novel was composed mainly in chronological order and Corthron "obsessively wrote [the draft] all the time," as fast as a hundred pages per month,[3] noting she completed three drafts before showing it to anyone else.[2] She composed parts of the novel at numerous writers' retreats and workshops.[2][5]
Publication history
The length of The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter caused several publishers to pass on the novel or suggest that it either receive major cuts or be broken into a trilogy; Corthron persisted until Seven Stories Press finally accepted the manuscript[2] in September 2014.[3] The original editor of the book at Seven Stories had resisted its publication, and Corthron believes the advocacy of another Seven Stories author, who brought the book to the primary editor at Seven Stories, was critical to its eventual publication.[2] Corthron would cut 400 pages of the 1,200-page manuscript for final publication.[3]
- — (26 January 2016). The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter (1st hdbk. ed.). New York, New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-60980-657-6. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- — (26 January 2016). The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter (ebook ed.). New York, New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-60980-658-3.
- — (14 November 2017). The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter (1st pbk. ed.). New York, New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-60980-807-5.
Reception
The novel received mixed reviews, with praise for its dialogue but criticism for its length.[6][7] Publishers Weekly hailed the novel as echoing "the social conscience of Steinbeck, the epic sweep of Ferber, [and] the narrative quirks of Dos Passos."[8] Leonard Pitts, reviewing for The New York Times, took issue with the length: "There is significant flab on these bones, sins of writerly self-indulgence and authorial indiscipline."[7] Despite this, Pitts admired the novel's message: "... it succeeds admirably in a novel’s first and most difficult task: It makes you give a damn. It also does well by a novel’s second task: It sends you away pondering what it has to say."[7] Naomi Wallace was quoted "[The novel] is the most important piece of writing about twentieth-century America since James Baldwin's Another Country."[3]
Corthron read from the proof galleys of her novel in 2015 at an artist's residency and a fellow writer in residency, Cathy Davidson, was immediately reminded of "Faulkner. Morrison. Ismael Reed. I cannot wait to read this novel. [...] Breathtaking."[5]
Awards
The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter won the 2016 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize for best first novel.[1]
See also
- Kissing Case; a fictionalized version appears in the novel.
References
- "Congratulations to Kia Corthron for The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter Winner of the 2016 First Novel Prize". The Center for Fiction. 31 December 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- Kia Corthron (2016). "An Interview with Kia Corthron, author of The Castle Cross The Magnet Carter" (Interview). Virtual Writing University, The University of Iowa [blog]. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- Shea, Lisa (18 January 2016). "Has Culture Finally Caught Up to Kia Corthron?". Elle. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- Kia Corthron (26 September 2014). "Sitting down with Kia Corthron" (Interview). Interviewed by Madeline. Yale Herald. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- Davidson, Cathy N. (10 October 2015). "Stephen King's Advice on the "Crummy First Draft" (Listen Up, Dissertators!) and the Miracle of the Artist's Residency #ThankyouBogliascoFoundation". Cathy Davidson [blog]. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
- "Fiction Chronicle: American Voices". The Wall Street Journal. 16 February 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2017.(subscription required)
- Pitts, Leonard (29 January 2016). "'The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter,' by Kia Corthron". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- "The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter". Publishers Weekly. 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
External links
- Kia Corthron & Robin D.G. Kelley — The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter on YouTube
- Kia Corthron (2016). "Kia Corthron: Biography" (Interview). Interviewed by Veronica Liu. Kia Corthron. Retrieved 4 March 2017.