The Healing.

AuthorCusac, Anne-Marie
PositionReview - Brief Article

Another writer capable both of imagining the real and of giving life to language as people speak it--in this case Southern black English--is Gayl Jones, author of The Healing. The publisher, Beacon Press (1998), advertises The Healing as the book that convinced it to publish fiction for the first time in its nearly 150-year history. The press made a good choice.

Toni Morrison, at the time an editor at Random House, published Jones's first novels, Corregidora and Eva's Man in the 1970s. James Baldwin, John Updike, and Maya Angelou hailed Jones as a major literary talent. This is her first novel published in the United States since then. (The Healing appeared in bookstores shortly before Jones's husband barricaded their house in a confrontation with police over a fifteen-year-old conviction for weapons possession. He killed himself by slitting his throat when the police broke in. Shortly afterwards, the police sent Gayl Jones to a state psychiatric hospital, saying she was suicidal. Those events have unfortunately overshadowed Jones's achievement in her latest book.)

The novel's main character is Harlan Jane Eagleton, an African American woman from New Orleans, an autodidact, and a faith healer...

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