On the last page, Pittard writes, "This was life, a version of it" (page 271). What do you take this to mean?
Created: 08/07/19
Replies: 12
Join Date: 10/15/10
Posts: 3442
Join Date: 09/18/13
Posts: 20
I take that to mean that it's a version of life that Pittard found to be true enough in heart and soul for the telling. It may not necessarily be the actual truth of what was, but it's that particular truth to that particular soul. That ultimate truth cannot be easily found when emotional events are involved.
Join Date: 08/10/17
Posts: 215
Join Date: 03/14/19
Posts: 208
We all have our own versions of life. Siblings often have quite different memories of the same events. Even long-married people will view events differently. Pittard gives us a view of five characters impacted by the terrible plane crash, and all of those views are vastly different.
Join Date: 02/15/17
Posts: 24
Join Date: 01/20/16
Posts: 76
Pittard was referring to the enormous effort she had made to capture the setting of this novel by saying "This is life." By adding "...a version of it" she is recognizing that this is indeed a novel and a work of fiction.
Join Date: 05/31/11
Posts: 166
Join Date: 08/30/14
Posts: 265
Join Date: 02/08/16
Posts: 514
Join Date: 02/06/17
Posts: 438
Robert and Lily were on the black side of town (Pittard called it "the dark side") when the novel ended, trying to see Piedmont. They took in the sights, sounds, and smells of his neighborhood and observed what life looked like for the people who lived there. Then, I assume, they drove across town to a place where things looked, smelled, and sounded differently. Everyone was in the same "place" at the same time, but what was happening on one side of Atlanta was not what was happening on another. And was Lily or Robert's version of Piedmont's neighborhood the same Piedmont had? His mother? The children playing hopscotch on the sidewalk? Versions are much more than historical events. They are each individual person's experiences at that time.
Join Date: 03/13/12
Posts: 548
There are very distinct versions of life in racially segregated cities, and this novel has just such a setting. Some versions of life were very difficult to improve and often impossible to escape. It is interesting that one of the entries in this novel's Works Consulted is a 1962 LIFE magazine article with the subtitle "Those Who Cared for the Important Things." For many Americans in segregated places in 1962 (like the character Piedmont), artwork would not have been an important thing.
Join Date: 12/03/11
Posts: 276
In historical fiction like this, the author always presents a "version" of life. What life in Atlanta in 1962 was like varied by person: white, black, rich, poor. In this scene, Lily and Robert are returning from the black side of the segregated city, the hot summer breeze putting the whole city in motion, a "kind of fast-forward of movement and life." This indeed was Atlanta, in 1962. The entire novel presents a version of life from each character's viewpoint.
Join Date: 10/28/18
Posts: 12
Reply
Please login to post a response.