DON NOBLE: Comic memoirs describe growing up in Mississippi and becoming an author The Tuscaloosa News 1 hr ago Bill would prevent fired cops from working in other jurisdictions. Warm, wise, and revelatory, Becoming is the deeply personal reckoning of a woman of soul and substance who has steadily defied expectations—and whose story inspires us to do the same. An intimate, powerful, and inspiring memoir by the former First Lady of the United States.
© Provided by Tuscaloosa News Don NobleIn these difficult times, humorists are to be treasured. We should take them hot soup, make sure they are dressed warmly.
We need them and there are too few — Roy Blount, George Singleton, Tim Dorsey, Carl Hiaasen, a few others. Paraphrasing the statement about the famous bird: humorists don’t do one thing except make jokes for us to enjoy, and Harrison Scott Key is one of the best, winning, in 2015, the James Thurber Prize for his first book, a memoir about growing up in Coldwater, Mississippi, in a complicated family with a very difficult father.
The family was complicated, he learned over time, because his mother had married Gene, who divorced her, then married aunt Faye and died, then Mom married Pop who was aunt Faye’s brother. Harrison and his brother Bird had the same mother but were also cousins. A diagram was needed.
Key says when he heard the tale his first wish was to unhear it. Let’s leave it at that.
The difficult part was, as has been the case for boy children since Oedipus, his relationship with his dad.
Pop, a big, strong, angry disappointed man who traveled the state as a salesman for an asphalt company, wanted his boy to hunt, fish, kill things, to be a real man in Mississippi.
Reluctantly, sometimes against his will, Key obliged, even as child, rising at 4 a.m. to sit bundled in the pre-dawn freezing woods waiting for something to kill. He rarely succeeded but was still required to learn how to skin, gut, dismantle animals.
It’s funny when Key tells it.
The family lived in a rural area. Key describes his classmates: “everybody had scabs and scars and wounds. …There were boys with leg braces, missing teeth, broken hands from animal attacks. There was a boy with a dent in his head deep enough to catch rainwater.”
Key asked how that happened.
The answer: “Hatchet fight.”
Becoming Memoir
Key was an adequate athlete, pleasing Pop by playing football and baseball in high school — until he quit. Although no one in his hometown seemed interested in anything that went on anywhere else, books were his escape, giving him “a thousand vistas into a thousand worlds, worlds without goats on roofs or chickens in trucks.”
One scene needs highlighting. Pop, coaching a pee-wee football team and determined to win, took Harrison, a big teenager, to Pearl, Mississippi, and used him as a ringer. Harrison towered over the little kids, who, having been told he was their age, regarded him as mentally slow or with a gland problem.
Key got into the spirit of the thing, ran literally over the pee-wees, and the score was 63-0.
Key has written the screenplay for this scene.
Sometimes comical, Key’s childhood was also painful. Pop did not spare the rod — there were whippings with a leather belt. To Pop’s dismay, Key became interested in theater, literature, and stand-up comedy. He would end up with four college degrees, teach, marry.
One Thanksgiving he brings his wife home, always risky business. Pop does not disappoint:
“I think your thighs may be getting bigger,” he tells her and it gets worse over time with a debate over the aesthetics of breast feeding. From time to time, Key admits, he often hated his dad, but, of course, he loved Pop, too. The book ends in fact with the word “love.”
“Congratulations,” the second comic memoir, covers some of the same ground, but explains why “World’s Largest Man” took so long to write.
For over 10 years Key had struggled, writing short stories, plays, articles, amassing a mountain of rejection slips, rising at dawn not to sit in the freezing woods but to write in cafes.
He would work all day and was exhausted, sometimes emotionally unavailable in the evenings, endangering his marriage, until his epiphany. He found his “voice” and his subject. In his hyperbolic, sardonic style, he would tell the story of his bizarre childhood.
Success follows with an exhausting 100-city book tour: more early rising, airplanes, bad hotels, hasty breakfast buffets, disappointingly small audiences — agony described in hilarious detail.
A commonplace among authors: The only thing worse than being sent on a book tour is if your publisher won’t send you on a book tour.
Key is now at home in Savannah, Georgia, with his wife and three daughters, writing his third book which, we are told, is NOT the story of how he came to write his second book.
Don Noble’s newest book is Alabama Noir, a collection of original stories by Winston Groom, Ace Atkins, Carolyn Haines, Brad Watson, and eleven other Alabama authors.
“The World’s Largest Man: A Memoir”
Author: Harrison Scott Key
Publisher: HarperCollins
Pages: 235
Price: $26.99 (Hardcover)
“Congratulations: Who Are You Again? A Memoir”
Author: Harrison Scott Key
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Price: $15.99 (Paper)
Pages: 346
Don NobleBecoming Memoir Author
This article originally appeared on The Tuscaloosa News: DON NOBLE: Comic memoirs describe growing up in Mississippi and becoming an author