2011/12/20

Elijah Rising by Lyn LeJeune

Overview: The story of the Ishmael-like friendship between two young men: a wealthy white New Yorker, Michael Cooke Holt, and a black tent-fundamentalist preacher, Elijah Broom, set in that period of turmoil and crisis in American history in which scientific marvels, social unrest, economic disasters, and the First World War, created new vistas about the individual and the nation.

In Lyn LeJeune's Elijah Rising, the heir to a railroad fortune, Michael is an aimless soul struggling to find his path in life. In World War I America, patriotism prevails and pacifists are punished. A misfit in the academic world and rejected for military service, Michael lives off a generous allowance from his callous mother and passes time in between bouts of drinking by wandering the streets of New York City. There he meets the disadvantaged and downtrodden and feels the need to share about their suffering through his writing.

One of his encounters is with a young, orphaned black boy named Elijah Broom. For reasons even Michael can’t understand, he is compelled to learn more about Elijah’s life. When he later finds out that Elijah has become a revivalist preacher, traveling through America to bring God’s message to the masses, Michael decides to follow him. Their journey takes them through the dangerous territory of the Klan and further west to the dusty deserts. Elijah becomes far more than a personal interest story to Michael – he becomes the answer to everything he has sought in life. Michael, the once-tortured soul, has found a cause in Elijah, the embodiment of hope and salvation. But the charismatic Elijah is more than what he seems to be on the surface…

I relish a story where I reach the last page with a better understanding of the times in which it took place. Elijah Rising, in which the narrative alternates between Michael and Elijah, is one such book. I learned far more about the social and political workings of earlier 20th century America than I ever did from a textbook. This is by no means a light read; it is as times dark and disturbing to know of the prejudices that persisted long after Emancipation and that hate crimes existed long before they had a name. The author does not avoid close inspections of squalor, disease and crime. Michael is a humanitarian ahead of his time and through his eyes we view the complex and often ugly society that existed just a century ago in America.

Available from inGroup Press and at Amazon.com.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

I read this book in one day, but only after I quit stopping to take notes and looking up events for further information.

LeJeune's ability to weave events into the lives of her two very different characters is impressive. She allows the reader to experience the events as people reacted to them at the time. This is not a history text nor is it a story with "history things" put in it for decoration.

She does justice to the complexity of both struggling men without becoming an apologist for either.

I "know" this time period, but this is one of the few times that a writer made me "feel" it. Several times the ramifications of events on differing people caught me by surprise. This is a testament to her writing and story-telling skills.

I almost hesitate writing this review because I'm afraid I won't do the book justice. I highly recommend it, but I would suggest to a reader to set aside a day to read it when the story can truly be savored.

(Blogger is being weird and I've written this twice now. Trying next as Anonymous, but my name is Jan and I teach US History in WA)

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