This is a 477-page book without a plot. But it has characters! Oh boy, does it have characters—imaginative, one-of-a-kind, eye-popping characters. It is these characters that make this book such a wonder.
Published in 1958, this is Shirley Ann Grau's first novel and was not received warmly by critics, the lack of plot being the No. 1 complaint. Grau went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1965 for "The Keepers of the House," a compelling page-turner with a commanding and formidable message about the ugliness and hypocrisy of racism. (I highly recommend this book, too!)
This is the story of a small group of descendants of Louisiana's French-Spanish pioneers who live on a tiny, somewhat isolated island called the Isle aux Chiens (Isle of Dogs) in the Gulf of Mexico that Grau describes in the first pages of the book as located "in the coastal curve just east of the tripatite mouth of the Mississippi." It's been whipped by more hurricanes than anyone can count, but the rickety houses, beat-up boats, and storm-hardened people always manage to survive. The story takes place during the hottest part of a Louisiana summer, and the bold and vivid descriptions of the intense heat, interminable sweat, and pervasive bugs, especially the clouds of mosquitoes and colonies of red ants, will have you fanning yourself and scratching at non-existent itches.
In addition to no plot, there isn't what I would call a main character, but rather a colorful cast that includes:
• Annie Landry, a 16-year-old girl who is caught between girlhood and womanhood and experimenting with sex and alcohol. She yearns for a life away from the island.
• Inky D'Alfonso, a young man who is crew for a sailboat that has had to dock on the island for a few weeks while the owner is in New Orleans with his wife, who has an infected tooth. Inky, who is also an amateur artist specializing in drawings of nude women, is the consummate outsider trying to fit in.
• Henry Livaudais, an 18-year-old man/boy, who goes hunting in the marshes and doesn't return after a week, causing deep concern, uproar, and grief among the close-knit islanders who launch several search-and-rescue attempts. His disappearance has grave, startling consequences for the island.
• Pete Livaudais, 16, is Henry's devoted younger brother, who is so devastated when Henry disappears hunting that he displays truly alarming and terrifying behavior.
• Al Landry, Annie's widowed father, who visits the mainland of Port Ronquille and finds a new wife, Adele, who has a little boy, Claudie from her first marriage that also left her a widow.
• Cecile Boudreau, a very happily married but also very young woman with children, who is struggling just a bit to figure out her place in the world when everything has already been defined for her.
• Mamere Terrebonne, the oldest person on the island, who is sick, possibly dying, and irascible. The children of the island take turns sleeping in her house at night just in case she dies; they often find these nights to be terrifying.
The end is abrupt. Very abrupt. At first, it felt as if there were pages missing, but then I started to think about it and realized how brilliant it is—albeit most unusual and a bit dissatisfying.
I adore books that are propelled not by a plotline but rather by the characters, so naturally I was enthralled by this. That said, I fully realize it's not for everyone. If you're the kind of reader who keeps waiting for something to happen, skip this book. But if you want to inhabit a world like no other and feel that you have been transported to a remote island in the Gulf in the 1950s, this is a must-read.
The best part of the book is the writing. It is simply exquisite, and it is this alone that makes the book worthwhile and such a wonder.