Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Store by T. S. Stribling, 1932



The Store by T. S. Stribling, written in 1932, is the second of a three-part series about the South, before, during, and after the Civil War. The first book is The Forge and the third is The Unfinished Cathedral. Together, the three books are an excellent description of the war told through the experiences of the Vaiden family. Unlike Gone With the Wind, the series by Stribling is not sympathetic to the Southern point of view of the war, of the institution of slavery or of the aftermath of the Civil War. Stribling grew up in a family in Tennessee where one of his grandfathers served in the Confederate Army and one served in the Union Army. The Forge starts with the Vaiden family on their small plantation just before the War. They live in Northern Alabama, close to Tennessee, and own a few slaves.
Miltiades Vaiden, is the central character in the series. He fights in the War, as described in The Forge, and comes out of it a colonel and is called by that title the rest of his life. The Vaiden family is followed through the War and afterward, to the end of the series. Miltiades Vaiden represents the valiant Confederate officer who brought honor to his state even though the South lost the war. Running through the series of books is the Vaiden family’s relationship with their slaves and former slaves. In The Store, the Colonel is without employment, barely living off the sharecroppers who work on their old plantation. For a time he is active in getting a local branch of the Ku Klux Klan started in his area. It’s interesting that the Klan was started, according to Stribling, as away of using fear and intimidation to keep the former slaves working on the estates as sharecroppers.
Through a dishonest act Miltiades gets the money to start a store. His wife dies and he marries the daughter of the woman he almost married at the outset of the War. In The Unfinished Cathedral, Miltiades is a wealthy banker who is trying to have a large cathedral built in his honor and as a place for him to be buried at the end of his life. The story ends as the Great Depression sets in and the wealth gained by Miltiades is lost and so is the cathedral he is building.
Miltiades is a flawed man who, when he no longer has the labor of slaves to sustain his wealth, turns to dishonest means to regain a position of influence. In the process, he leads other men in the Klan to intimidate the former slaves and keep their labor on the farms as sharecroppers. Miltiades succeeds in business for a time but fails in the end and dies a broken man. I think Stribling meant Miltiades to represent the South that benefited from slavery but lost in the end. I found it hard at times to read about how the slaves and freed slaves were treated by some Southerners. They were emancipated in the Civil War but were kept in their place by forces in the South that needed them as laborers and sharecroppers.
This is one more forgotten yet great novel that I found by reading the Pulitzer winners. I strongly recommend reading the series by Stribling, starting with the Forge. It is a great account of the South, slavery, reconstruction, and of the onset of the Great Depression.

2 comments:

  1. Sounds like a fascinating set of novels. You said The Store did not take a sympathetic view of the South's position. I have a question. The Colonel obviously takes the South's position, so I assume you mean the author or the narrator was suggesting criticism of that view. How did the author do this while his main character was a tried and true advocate of the Confederacy? I would love to see an example of this. I think it would be hard to pull off. I'm thinking of how Mark Twain masterfully had Huck work as the naive narrator to put across an anti-slavery message without Huck's realizing it. Same for Colonel Vaiden?

    Another question: Series of novels are very popular these days, especially in fantasy. Were series of three novels unusual in Stribling's time? Was he breaking new ground for stories being told across multiple books?

    One more question: Does each book stand alone as a work of literary art? Or, does each book need the other two to make sense and to deliver the overall message? If I were to read this Pulitzer winner, would I have have to read the first book first? Do you think the Pulitzer committee had read the series? Is the second a better book that the other two?

    Thanks for an interesting review and a thought-provoking one.

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    Replies
    1. I too have been reading Pulitzer Prize winners in the area of fiction and the last I finished was 'The Store.' Your account makes me jealous I didn't think of writing down my own experiences. I first was appalled by the southern perspective but tried to figure in the fact that this was written from the viewpoint of a southern war survivor, monied, apparently cheated, and watches as his son hangs - this last act justifies the colonel's and the south's tragic end. Now with your blog I am challenged to read the other two books in this trilogy.

      As I was writing this, a thought came to me, or am I crazy - my thinking - does Stribling make a Jesus connection with the two thieves hanging opposite the innocent in what reads like Golgathic imagery?

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