House of Cotton
By Monica Brashears
Flatiron Books,9781250851932, April 2024, 304 pp.
The Short of It:
Raw and brutal.
The Rest of It:
One night, while working at her dead-end gas station job, Magnolia Brown encounters a mysterious, slick stranger named Cotton. He offers to turn her luck around with a lucrative “modeling” job at his family’s funeral home–where she will pose as clients’ dead loved ones. She accepts. ~ From the publisher
This story will hit you with a closed fist. The author holds nothing back. Magnolia’s struggle to live has her doing things that at first won’t shock you, but then as the story plays out, I found her desperation to survive shockingly sad. The people she encounters never have her best interests at heart. No. And deep down she knows it, but her walk to freedom is alarming at times. So much so that I almost put the book down more than once.
This was chosen for my book club so I felt the need to finish it and it left me in a strange place. On the one hand, the writing is peppered with beautiful moments but the story is dark, very dark. Death and decay hang out at every turn and it’s pretty explicit.
There are moments though, that reveal Magnolia’s true heart, like her relationship with a homeless man and the many memories of her grandma that are shared throughout the story. Life in a funeral home is rough and when you choose to play a dead loved one, things can get a little dangerous. Not so much the action of it, but what it does to your psyche. When you are so fully immersed in death, how do you separate life from death?
I will be honest here, House of Cotton was a FINALIST for the 2024 NYPL Young Lions Fiction Award and NPR’s BEST BOOK OF 2023, but it’s explicit in detail and might be a lot for someone not used to reading something so raw and ragged.
Source: Borrowed
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I was curious about this one when it came out, but the reviews were mixed. Might be too gritty for me, but it would make an interesting book club discussion.
This sounds like a very tough read. I wonder how your book group will feel about it.
I bet this made for an excellent book club selection and discussion. I think I’ll see if the library has an audio version, since that seems to be where I am these days.
Wow this sounds intense. I think any time a book tackles poverty and those trying to survive (from whatever issues) it can be a tough read that gets into our psyches.