American Classics |
(And now, a special dispatch by my colleague Lovia Gyarkye.) |
Anne Trubek launched Belt Publishing five years ago. “A huge number of readers were thirsty to read stories of their experiences that had been overlooked and underwritten,” she said. This year, the Cleveland-based press, which focuses on the Midwest (the so-called Rust Belt), looked to that region’s literary history for the Belt Revival series, a collection of new editions of Midwestern classics. Each book – there are currently five — is retrofitted with new introductions and arresting covers. (My favorite is for Sherwood Anderson’s “Poor White,” below.) |
In his introduction to Anderson’s epic — about a young man’s experience with encroaching industrialism — John Lingan concludes that “‘Poor White’ is a social history that reaches uncomfortably deep into its subjects’ psyches, a still-relevant tract that aches with raw feeling. We might still yet heed its example, and appreciate its vision.” Belt Revivals wisely brings Anderson back onto the radar during this political moment. “We think these works will enrich people’s understanding of the Midwest,” Ms. Trubek said. “And also help complicate any attempt to romanticize or be nostalgic or forget the history of the region.” |
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