Saturday, October 26, 2019
Eudora Weltys The Ponder Heart :: Eudora Welty The Ponder Heart
Eudora Welty's The Ponder Heart      The New York Times posted a review of Eudora Welty's The Ponder Heart on January 10, 1954. V.S. Pritchett wrote the review titled "Bossy Edna Earle Had a  Word for Everything."    Pritchett gives ample credit to Welty for her novel The Ponder Heart explaining it takes a good deal of experience to write such a story that deals with "a complex position in the narrative" (para 4). Pritchett describes the character, Edna Earle and he is intrigued by her narrative role.    Identifying the characters, certain events, and the type of environment the  story takes place in; Pritchett sets the stage of The Ponder Heart. He identifies this  piece as a "lighter work", but adds "there is not a mistake in it" (para 7). This phrase  is crucial to the review because without it a reader may believe the story has little  substance. The statement "there is not a mistake in it" intrigues the mind to see  what this book is all about.    Pritchett begins the review using complex sentences that appear to be taking  the reader nowhere, making the review weak from the very beginning. In fact, the  first paragraph makes one believe they are reading the wrong review. This  paragraph talks about the Irish revival and Scottish and Welsh regionalism,  appearing to have nothing to do with Welty. Eventually, Pritchett ties this paragraph  into Welty comparing her as an American Southern regional writer.    Pritchett states, "Sometimes a regional writer becomes the professional  topographer of local oddity. With one sophisticated foot outside his territory, he sets  out to make his folk quaint or freakish, and he can be said to condescend to and   even exploit them" (para 2).   The Ponder Heartis filled with oddity, as well as quaint  and freakish folks making this statement definitely relevant.    Describing The Ponder Heart, Pritchett does no more than give a summary of  the story, with a few exceptions, rather than a critique. Perhaps the book is that  simple, although I don't believe so.  					    
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