Famous all over Town

Famous all over Town

A Novel

  • Author: Schein, Bernie; Owens, Janis
  • Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
  • Serie: Story River Books
  • ISBN: 9781611174397
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781611174403
  • eISBN Epub: 9781611174403
  • Place of publication:  South Carolina , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2014
  • Month: September
  • Language: English

Novelist Walker Percy once said that the only remaining unexplored territory in Southern literature was the Jewish southerner. Famous all over Town, the first novel from Southern storyteller Bernie Schein, stakes a claim on Percy's unexplored terrain with a comically candid multi-generational account of two Jews, a lowcountry native and a Northern transplant, at the epicenter of momentous events in the sleepy southern coastal hamlet of Somerset, a fictitious stand-in for Schein's native Beaufort, South Carolina.

Schein's diverse and memorable cast includes Southern Jewish lawyer Murray Gold and his foil, displaced New York psychiatrist Bert Levy; emotionally scarred USMC drill sergeant Jack McGowan and his alluring and unconventional wife, Mary Beth; corrupt and adulterous sheriff Hoke Cooley, his deeply conservative wife, Regina, and their violent son, Boonie; African American madam and later city councilwoman Lila Trulove (also Hoke's mistress), her brilliant daughter, Elizabeth, and her conflicted Harvard-bound son, Driver; fallen Southern belle turned voice of a generation Arlanne Palmer; remorseful Vietnam veteran and flamboyant transvestite Royal Cunningham; and inspirational schoolteacher Pat Conroy. Famous all over Town also uses its web of interconnected storylines to make its setting, the town itself, a central character with a personality and an arc as complete as that of any other member of the deftly rendered cast.

Delving beneath the surface of the Southern status quo, Schein's tale follows these interconnected lives through the private and public upheavals in small-town life from the turbulent 1960s to the eve of the new millennium, confronting the ramifications of the civil rights era, Vietnam, Watergate, and—closer to home—a deadly version of the infamous Ribbon Creek incident. Somerset's colorful citizens also confront their own repressed memories, conflicted identities, burgeoning ambitions, and romantic entanglements. Even as events unfold to often-uproarious effect, Schein's novel holds true to a deeply realized sense of intimacy and authenticity in the interactions of its myriad characters as revelations expose how these disparate lives are conjoined in surprising ways. Shifting points of view place readers squarely in the mindsets of many of Somerset's key citizens as Schein lovingly and laughingly invites us to reconsider what it means in the modern South to be white, black, Jewish, Christian, military, civilian, sane, insane, old, young, male, female, gay, and straight—and to be of a place rather than merely in it.

Best-selling Southern novelist and self-described "Florida cracker" Janis Owens, author of American Ghost, The Cracker Kitchen, and other books, provides a foreword.

  • Cover
  • FAMOUS ALL OVER TOWN
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Author’s Note
  • Prologue, Fall 1992: Elizabeth Trulove Shakes the Sheriff’s World
  • Part I : Spring 1960
    • 1 Sergeant Jack McGowan Marches 71 Recruits Into Oyster Creek
    • 2 Dr. Bert Levy Confronts Sergeant McGowan After the Death March
    • 3 Bert Consults with Lila at Her Brothel for a Second Opinion
    • 4 The C.O. Reads the Yankee Newspapers
    • 5 The Sheriff Diddles, Jesus Gets in the Way, and Elizabeth Burns
    • 6 The New York Times Stumbles into Action
    • 7 The Times Covers the Story, the C.O. Covers His Ass
    • 8 Bert Continues to Treat Jack and Discovers They Are Not Alone
    • 9 Bert Requests Emergency Procedures, Jack’s Graffiti Reveals a Clue
    • 10 The Boys Fish as Elizabeth Asks a Damn Good Question
    • 11 Bert Escalates the War between Jack and His Father
    • 12 Bert Contemplates the Photo of Jack’s Wife Mary Beth
    • 13 Bert Frees the Children and Exposes the Saboteur
  • Part II: Summer 1961
    • 14 Driver Worries About Everything from Alligators to Communists
    • 15 Murray Recalls Showing Bert the Town
    • 16 Bert Takes the Stand
    • 17 The Headlines Speak for Themselves
    • 18 Elizabeth Concludes That Being a Good Girl Is a Lot of Work
    • 19 Mary Beth’s Visit Excites Bert and Murray
    • 20 Arlanne Discovers the Love of Her Life
    • 21 Bert Desperately Turns to Lila for Help Once Again
    • 22 Boonie Walks Out of Driver’s Childhood Forever
    • 23 Bert Watches With Fascination as Lila Takes the Stand
    • 24 Murray Smells Trouble, Then Serves the Noble Cause of Love
  • Part III: Fall 1966
    • 25 Elizabeth Integrates the Somerset County Schools
    • 26 Bert Finds It Difficult to Look and Not Touch
    • 27 Lila Shows Bert What ‘The Cause’ Really Is
    • 28 Arlanne’s World Goes ‘Round and ‘Round
    • 29 Bert’s First Therapy Session With Elizabeth Is an Education for Both
    • 30 Bert Tells Lila What ‘Elizabeth’s Cause’ Really Is
    • 31 Bert Tries to Get Elizabeth to Be Wherever She Is
    • 32 Arlanne Gets Caught but Her Heart Beats for Bert
    • 33 Bert Counsels a War Criminal
    • 34 Jack and Royal Confide on Scataway Island
    • 35 Driver Advocates a Nonviolent Response to His Report Card
    • 36 Bert Obsesses Over Mary Beth, Then Screams into a Towel
    • 37 Arlanne Displays Revolutionary Zeal, but Bert Still Yearns for Mary Beth
  • Part IV: Winter 1966
    • 38 Royal Surrenders, but to Whom?
    • 39 Bert is Ordered to the C.O.’s Office
    • 40 Arlanne Learns That Bad Girls Can Go to Heaven Too
    • 41 The C.O. Contemplates the Death March Into Vietnam
    • 42 Pat Conroy Teaches Elizabeth to See the World Through Her Own Eyes
    • 43 Arlanne Plots Her Seduction of Bert Among the Night Flowers
    • 44 Jack Knows Solitude and Joy, However Ephemeral
  • Part V: Spring 1967
    • 45 Regina Is Haunted by the She-Devil Inside Her
    • 46 Arlanne Is Instructed to ‘Read On, My Love’
    • 47 Regina Takes a Long Time to Do Nothing
    • 48 Arlanne Interrogates a White Caller Pretending to be Black
    • 49 Bert Treats Hoke, or Is It, He Wonders, the Other Way Around?
    • 50 Nurse Lane Thelma Dee’s Take on the Best Therapist in Town
    • 51 Lila and Jack React to Regina’s Suicide Attempt
    • 52 God’s Messenger Pays a Nocturnal Visit to the Reverend
  • Part VI: 1968
    • 53 Arlanne Gets Published
    • 54 Rob Reacts to Arlanne’s Article
    • 55 Rob Invites Another Article as Arlanne Determines That Money Is the Source of All Good
    • 56 Rob Lets Arlanne Hear From Her Readers
    • 57 Bert Defines for All Time the Jewish Condition
    • 58 Elizabeth Obsesses With Arlanne’s Article but Has No Idea Why
  • Part VII: 1970s
    • 59 Elizabeth Refuses to Deliver Her Valedictory Address
    • 60 Elizabeth Delivers Her Valedictory Address
    • 61 Arlanne Pitches a New Story, Then Procrastinates Like Crazy
    • 62 For Mary Beth, Jack, and Royal, It’s Watergate Versus Waterbed
    • 63 A Renewed Mary Beth Takes to Dusting and Cleaning the Dusted and Clean
    • 64 Somerset Converges on the Trial of Royal Cunningham
    • 65 Lila Appears to be Violating a Corpse in Room 27
    • 66 Royal Touches Up His Makeup While Boonie Goes Bananas
    • 67 Regina Receives Her Proof That There Is a God
    • 68 For Arlanne and Driver, Two Wrongs Don’t Make a Writer
    • 69 Arlanne Wonders if Jimmy Carter has the Tool for the Presidency
    • 70 Driver Is a Negro In Harvard Square
    • 71 Driver Learns Some Holes Are More Equal Than Others
  • Part VIII: 1980s
    • 72 Former Madam Lila Gets Elected to Town Council
    • 73 For Murray, Bert, and Arlanne, Love Mostly Conquers All
    • 74 Jack Goes in the Water, Royal Goes to Jail, and Mary Beth Goes to Work
  • Part IX: 1990s
    • 75 Arlanne Says It’s Better to be an Oreo Than a Cracker
    • 76 Tova’s Opinion on Whether ‘No’ Means ‘No’ and ‘Yes’ Means ‘Yes’
    • 77 Lila and Elizabeth Find Peace in the Inevitable
  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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