Tuesday, February 23, 2016

The Stone Necklace by Carla Damron

a book review by Connie Britt, Trinity Cathedral Columbia


Ms. Carla Damron is a member of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, Columbia. Her book has been chosen for the 2016 One Columbia's One Book, One Community read. Congratulations, Carla. 

Pat Conroy's “jacket blurb” for Carla Damron's novel THE STONE NECKLACE says, “Damron's masterful portrayal of misery giving way to empathy leads us toward a glimmering hope of redemption for families and a community on the cusp of bold rebirth. This is a novelist to be read again and again.” For any writer, those words from that wordsmith must be the ultimate validation. For the reader/reviewer they are keys to analyze and appreciate this lovely, touching novel.

The first key is “portrayal” for the portraits of the widely diverse cast of characters in this story are cleanly and honestly drawn. These are real people.  Lena Hastings and her husband Mitch are a couple you might know if you belong to the country club – they live in a lovely home in one of Columbia, SC's best neighborhoods, they are active in their church, supporters and participants in the community's art circles, the parents of three children. Tonya Ladson, her husband John, and their young son Bryon are a young family struggling to make ends meet; financial pressure, the pressure of juggling a small child's needs when both parents are working, and the pressure of feeling they are not living up to the expectations of their parents are very familiar to too many young families today. Nurse Sandy Albright has been through several hells – a miscarriage, a divorce, drug addiction, job suspension – when we meet her as she comes into the hospital locker room on her first day back at work. And then there's wonderful Joe Booker who has done some yard work for Mitch Hastings - a homeless man who has found a more or less permanent shelter in the graveyard up close to the church wall behind Mr. Pinckney's stone at the church where the Hastings worship.

Joe Booker, Sandy Albright, Tonya Ladson, and Lena Hastings are the four characters who form the corners of the frame for this story; but there are many other wonderfully drawn characters who are woven into their seemingly unrelated worlds. Each of these four main characters has known pain and disillusionment; each has battled his or her own demons. Thus the ground is plowed for them to be attuned to the pain of others, particularly young Becca Hastings the teen-aged youngest child of Lena and Mitch. The character of Becca is beautifully drawn. This child on the cusp of adulthood dealing with peer pressure, insecurity, and then the loss of her father becomes a focal point for decisions and actions that impact those around her. In their reaction to and concern for her others are pulled away from their own sorrow and become stronger than they thought they were because she needs them. 

Empathy is not a synonym for sympathy. It is active, not passive. It is acknowledging, not judging. Rev. Bill Tanner and Mitch acknowledge Joe; they find work for him when they can; thy don't lecture. Sandy Albright sees the pain in Becca; she recognizes the struggle Becca has with herself; she doesn't preach but gives Becca her phone number. Lena's love for her daughter forces her to look inward and honestly appraise what has happened in her life, why it has happened, and what steps she must take next. In example after example throughout the book, from minor characters to major characters, the theme that in interpersonal relationships empathy can emerge and lead to healing and redemption is brought home.

A final note, a grace note, this is a novel with deeply important themes about individuals we care for and the interrelationship of individuals and community.  However, in the depth this powerful story is humor.  The chatter in Tonya's office with her friend Marion and their immediate supervisor Ruth aka “Ruthless” is fast and dead-on. The descriptions of the early attempts of Joe to stay clear of a homeless woman named Rag Doll are both poignant and funny. The dialogue between Becca and her older brothers as they watch the football game between the University of South Carolina and Troy State University with their mascots, the “Cocks” and the “Trojans,” will bring a grin to anyone with any SC connections,
           

A melody has more that one note. A symphony has more than one theme. A good story invokes more than one emotion; and this is a very good story.

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