Current:Home > News'House of Cotton' is a bizarre, uncomfortable read — in the best way possible -Elevate Capital Network
'House of Cotton' is a bizarre, uncomfortable read — in the best way possible
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:01:19
Monica Brashears' House of Cotton is hard to classify.
On the surface, it's a Black southern gothic novel about a young woman learning to navigate life alone. But it's also a creepy ghost story with a sense of humor, a narrative about survival, and a strange tale of loss and grief sprinkled with sex, abuse, empathy, and a deep look at what it means to be dealt a rough hand at life from the very beginning.
That said, there's something that's very easy to declare about this novel: It's an incredible debut that announces the arrival of a unique voice in contemporary fiction.
Magnolia Brown is 19 years old, broke, alone, grieving, and pregnant. Her grandmother, Mama Brown, who took her in because her mother struggled with addiction and money, just died and left Magnolia at the mercy of a predatory landlord. Magnolia works a crappy job at a gas station and spends some of her time there hanging out with a silent homeless man she calls Cigarette Sammy. One night, a man named Cotton shows up at the gas station with blood on his hands and offers Magnolia a modeling job at his funeral home. Magnolia is hesitant to take the strange man up on his offer, but rent is due and she has no other opportunities lined up, so she takes a chance and goes to the funeral home. The offer from Cotton turns out to be real, and Magnolia soon finds herself turning into different people with the help of Cotton's partner, a hard-drinking woman named Eden who can use makeup to turn her into almost anyone.
The three of them help people talk to a reasonable facsimile of a lost loved one, and business is booming. The money is good and Magnolia stops going to the gas station and moves in with Cotton, but not everything goes well. Magnolia is afraid her unwanted pregnancy will be the end of their partnership and Cotton has strange desires and even stranger requests for their growing list of clients. While dealing with the aftermath of her abortion and trying to hide from her landlord, the ghost of Magnolia's late grandmother — herself haunted by a different ghost — starts visiting her and Magnolia soon understands that more than her rent hangs in the balance.
House of Cotton is a bizarre, uncomfortable read in the best way possible. Brashears delves deep into what it means to be a young, broke woman of color in a world in which predatory men are at your doorstep, in the streets, and even at church. She's not always likable, but real people rarely are, so her rough edges and the way she stumbles through life, a bit defiant, a bit scared, and sleeping with men to fill the void in her soul — and failing to do so — make her more memorable and unique, and her flaws contribute to the empathy she generates in readers.
To some degree, the same happens with Cotton, whose shady past and strange relationship with Magnolia are hard to swallow; Eden, who constantly looks like someone else and often vanishes only to return drunk but who also helped Magnolia with her abortion; and even Cigarette Sammy, who conveys a plethora of emotions with basically no dialogue at all. They are all slightly wrecked by life and lost and readers don't get all the pieces to their identity puzzles — but that, like many other things in the novel, merely reflects reality painfully well.
This is a novel that refuses to obey the rules of any one genre, and that, complicated as it might be for some, is one of the best things about it. At times, this reads like a coming-of-age story, but then Brashears shatters that with sexual abuse, lots of drinking, an abortion and its aftermath, and Magnolia's numerous sexual encounters with men she meets through an app. Similarly, the narrative seems rooted in reality, but then the ghost of Mama Brown — moving around in her rotting body — begins to appear, losing fingers one at a time, crawling from under the bed, and even stuffed into a drawer as a prank. As the supernatural weaves in and out of the story, Magnolia and Mama Brown's past take center stage and readers get to see what haunts each of them. Sure, the format is unique and thus not easy to process, but that just points to how Brashers isn't afraid to write to the beat of her own drum.
House of Cotton is peculiar and slightly surreal, but also dazzling, full of surprises, and told with a voice that's unpredictable and, more importantly, that lingers. Darkness can have slices of beauty at its core, and Brashears has a talent for pointing out that beauty, while its submerged in grit and grief. Fans of brave fiction would be remiss to skip this one.
Gabino Iglesias is an author, book reviewer and professor living in Austin, Texas. Find him on Twitter at @Gabino_Iglesias.
veryGood! (5123)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- The Most Accurate Climate Models Predict Greater Warming, Study Shows
- Boy, 3, dead after accidentally shooting himself in Tennessee
- Pence officially files paperwork to run for president, kicking off 2024 bid
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Summer House: Martha's Vineyard Stars Explain the Vacation Spot's Rich Black History
- What’s Worrying the Plastics Industry? Your Reaction to All That Waste, for One
- Jennifer Lopez Shares How Her Twins Emme and Max Are Embracing Being Teenagers
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Flash Deal: Save $261 on a Fitnation Foldable Treadmill Bundle
Ranking
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Amputation in a 31,000-year-old skeleton may be a sign of prehistoric medical advances
- Canada’s Tar Sands Pipelines Navigate a Tougher Political Landscape
- The Truth About Queen Camilla's Life Before She Ended Up With King Charles III
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Flash Deal: Save $261 on a Fitnation Foldable Treadmill Bundle
- Whatever happened to the Botswana scientist who identified omicron — then caught it?
- Kids Face Rising Health Risks from Climate Change, Doctors Warn as Juliana Case Returns to Court
Recommendation
Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
In Alaska’s Thawing Permafrost, Humanity’s ‘Library Is on Fire’
A 1931 law criminalizing abortion in Michigan is unconstitutional, a judge rules
Actors guild authorizes strike with contract set to expire at end of month
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Science Museums Cutting Financial Ties to Fossil Fuel Industry
As school starts, teachers add a mental-health check-in to their lesson plans
Alex Murdaugh's Lawyers Say He Invented Story About Dogs Causing Housekeeper's Fatal Fall