BOOKMONGER ‘Sometimes survival is relative’ Novella tells of fl eeing ghosts and chasing dreams ‘The Salt Fields’ is a novella written by Stacy D. Flood about life in the Jim Crow era South. NEW GO KART TRACK NOW OPEN! GO KARTS MINI GOLF GYROXTREME ROCK WALL KIDDIE RIDES AND MORE! SEASIDE, OREGON HWY 101 (1/4 mi South of Seaside) • 2735 S. Roosevelt • 503-738-2076 OPEN DAILY 11 A M T O 6 P M 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM a train for the North, where he hears there are more opportunities for Black men. Riding in the same seating compartment of the segregated passenger car are a newly- wed couple, Divinion and Lanah, and Car- Stacy D. Flood grew up in Buff alo, New vall, a soldier just discharged from the Army. The train ride north is going to take about York, but as a young man came to the West Coast to work on his Master of Fine Arts in 24 hours, so the four of them fall into a con- creative writing in the Bay Area. After trav- versation that quickly takes on the intimacy of strangers who are never going to see one eling the world over since then, he’s settled in Seattle , at least for now, where his career another again. Divinion is full of big talk, to which his as a playwright has taken off . bride takes exception. But when he ignores her peevishness and continues to converse with Carvall, Lanah focuses her wiles upon This week’s book Minister. ‘The Salt Fields’ by Stacy D. Flood The train clatters north through the coun- Lanternfi sh — 130 pp — $14; kindle $7.99 tryside, through fi elds of cotton that appear as a sea of white. When Minister observes that it looks like salt, Carvall notes that “there’s salt all over Carolina, salt from tears and blood But earlier this year, Flood also had a and the dead …. novella published. “The Salt Fields” may be “The whole South a slim volume, but it ain’t nothing but a packs a punch. AND LONG AFTER scar with some salt You’ll read, in the READING THE LAST on it.” fi rst few pages of this PAGE OF THIS BOOK, The train makes fi rst-person narra- tive, that “sometimes READERS OF ALL KINDS several extended along the way, survival is relative.” WILL FIND THEMSELVES stops which gives the trav- And as you get pulled PONDERING FLOOD’S elers time to get out, deeper into the story NUANCED INTIMATIONS visit relatives, dine at of Minister Peters OF GENERATIONAL a local café, gamble you’ll learn that in or get a haircut. But his experience there’s TRAUMA, SYSTEMIC they are still in the a corollary — that RACISM, REGRET AND South, with all of its oftentimes relatives REINVENTION. attendant perils. don’t survive. Despite the brevity Minister, that’s his of this book , Flood creates a densely detailed fi rst name, is a Black man who was born in the Jim Crow South. He comes from a family world of sensations and ideas. There are images and scenarios enough to keep a sym- of loss. He is the son of an orphan. He is the bologist busy for quite some time. husband of a woman who was found mur- And long after reading the last page of dered soon after she ran away with another this book, readers of all kinds will fi nd them- man. And a year and a half after that, Minis- selves pondering Flood’s nuanced intima- ter’s only child falls into a well and drowns. tions of generational trauma, systemic rac- “People disappear in the South, one way ism, regret and reinvention. or another,” Minister says. Especially Black The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMi- folks. chael, who writes this weekly column focus- Unmoored, he decides to leave the South ing on the books, authors and publishers of and its ghosts behind. He gives his house to the Pacifi c Northwest. Contact her at bar- the neighbor girl, an unwed teenage mom whose boyfriend has disappeared, and boards baralmcm@gmail.com