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Betty by Tiffany McDaniel – Highly recommended

December 19, 2021 Leave a comment Go to comments

Betty by Tiffany McDaniel (2020) French title: Betty. Translated by François Happe.

No matter how beautiful the pasture, it is the freedom to choose that makes the difference between a life lived and a life had.

Betty by Tiffany McDaniel is our Book Club choice for December and the proof that one should never write their best-of-the-year post before the year is truly ended. What a book.

Betty Carpenter was born in 1954 in a dry claw-foot bathtub in Arkansas. She’s the sixth child of a family of eight children. Her parents were a mixed couple, her father Landon was Cherokee and her mother Alka was white.

Betty is our narrator and she tells us her family’s story from 1909, her father’s birth to 1973, the year he died. Her parents were dirt poor and after a few years of moving around, they settled in an abandoned house lent by a friend in Breathed, Ohio. It was Leland’s hometown. They lived off the land, off the medicine Landon could concoct and off odd jobs. They were dirt-poor.

The first part of the book covers the 1908-1961 years. It’s shorter because Betty doesn’t have her own memories of these years but it’s an important part to root the family tree in its history. Landon’s Cherokee roots mean that he comes from a culture with a matriarchal tradition and a history of violence as his elders hid in the wilderness to avoid deportation to Oklahoma. Alka comes from a Bible abiding family with a history of domestic violence and no respect for women.

Alka and Landon have eight children: Leland, Fraya, Yarrow, Waconda, Flossie, Betty, Trustin and Lint. Yarrow and Waconda died before they were two. Betty’s story is centered around her and her sisters Fraya and Flossie. They father told her:

“In different native tribes, the Three Sisters represent the three most important crops. Maize, beans, and squash. The crops grow together as sisters. The oldest is maize. She grows the tallest, supportin’ the vines of her younger sisters. The middle sister is beans. She gives nitrogen and nutrition to the soil, which allows her sisters to grow resilient and strong. The youngest is squash. She is the protector of her sisters. She stretches her leaves to shade the ground and fight off weeds. It is squash’s vines which tie the Three Sisters together in a bond that is the strongest of all. This was how I knew I’d have three daughters, even after Waconda died. Fraya’s the corn. Flossie is the beans. And you, Betty, are squash. You must protect your sisters as squash protects the corn and beans.”

A tall order for Betty, who becomes the custodian of the family stories. Her mother tells her about her personal tragedy. She witnesses Fraya’s horrible fate and the two sisters share Fraya’s secret. She knows about Flossie’s dirty secrets too. A resilient child, Betty understands that women and men don’t have the same opportunities in life.

I realized then that pants and skirts, like gender itself, were not seen as equal in our society. To wear pants was to be dressed for power. But to wear a skirt was to be dressed to wash the dishes.

Betty is an ode to generation of women who had to live through discrimination due to their race, their gender or their social status. And sometimes the three at the same time, like Betty who was ostracized and bullied in school because of her Cherokee physique, her poverty and her gender. Telling Alka’s, Fraya’s and Flossie’s tragic lives is a way to keep them alive and tell the world that their lives mattered. The three of them were captive of a man around them, their father, their brother or their husband. Alka explains to Betty:

“My mother used to have figurines,” Mom said as she lifted her chin as high as it would go as she added another layer of lotion to her neck and collarbone. “All of the female figurines you could take apart because they were boxes or bowls. They all held somethin’. In their skirts, in their bodies, they all held somethin’. None of the male figurines held anything. They were solid. You couldn’t put anything in and you couldn’t take anything out. I suppose if you think about it long enough, you’ll see why this is like real life.”

Alka, like Hattie in The Twelve Tribes of Hattie, due to her own issue, isn’t equipped to mother so many children. As often in this case, the oldest daughter steps up and helps. But contrary to Hattie’s children, Alka’s children had their father. He’s the glue of the family. The one who heals with plants, teaches through gardening and relies on nature to help his children see the beauty around them instead of focusing on their misery. He loves his children and he mothers their bodies and their souls. He has stories about everything to turn a magic and poetic camera on the harsh reality of their lives.

I realized then that not only did Dad need us to believe his stories, we needed to believe them as well. To believe in unripe stars and eagles able to do extraordinary things. What it boiled down to was a frenzied hope that there was more to life than the reality around us. Only then could we claim a destiny we did not feel cursed to.

And the admirable outcome is that she’s able to say: Through his stories, I waltzed across the sun without burning my feet.

He’s a deeply caring man, one who is invested in his children’s life and education, who has no expectations of them, except to become what they want. Sons or daughters, it doesn’t matter. Intelligent, troubled, impaired or shallow, he loves them equally and is the real glue of the family.

Betty is emotional, tragic, violent, poetic, lyric, resilient and empowering.

Betty is actually Tiffany McDaniel’s mother and the author writes a beautiful ode to her lineage of strong women and an even more beautiful one to her grandfather, a man she never knew but was unusual in his generation for thinking that his daughters could be more than wives and mothers.

Betty is as much a tribute to Landon Carperter as the story of the Carpenter women. Betty says:

“Growin’ up,” I said, “I felt like I had sheets of paper stuck to my skin. Written on these sheets were words I’d been called. Pow-wow Polly, Tomahawk Kid, Pocahontas, half-breed, Injun Squaw. I began to define myself and my existence by everything I was told I was, which was that I was nothing. Because of this, the road of my life narrowed into a path of darkness until the path itself flooded and became a swamp I struggled to walk through.

“I would have spent my whole life walkin’ this swamp had it not been for my father. It was Dad who planted trees along the edge of the swamp. In the trees’ branches, he hung light for me to see through the darkness. Every word he spoke to me grew fruit in between this light. Fruit which ripened into sponges. When these sponges fell from the branches into the swamp, they drank in the water until I was standin’ in only the mud that was left. When I looked down, I saw my feet for the first time in years. Holdin’ my feet were hands, their fingers curled up around my soles. These hands were familiar to me. Garden dirt under the fingernails. How could I not know they were the hands of my father?

“When I took a step forward, the hands took it with me. I realized then that the whole time I thought I’d been walking alone, my father had been with me. Supportin’ me. Steadyin’ me. Protectin’ me, best he could. I knew I had to be strong enough to stand on my own two feet. I had to step out of my father’s hands and pull myself up out of the mud. I thought I would be scared to walk the rest of my life without him, but I know I’ll never really be without him because each step I take, I see his handprints in the footprints I leave behind.”

Isn’t this what parenthood is all about? Steadying feet and hanging lanterns along the path to adulthood?

Highly recommended.

PS : The original cover of the book (kept for the French edition too) is based on an Afghan crocheted by Betty. The UK paperback edition features a picture of Betty as a child. More pictures here, on Tiffany McDaniel’s website.

  1. December 19, 2021 at 10:40 am

    This sounds like a great bookclub read and a labour of love for a mother. Is it nonfiction or a re-imagined fictional account of the life of the author’s mother? The first cover says ‘a novel’.

    Like

    • December 19, 2021 at 10:46 am

      We haven’t discussed it yet but yes, it is a good Book Club read.
      I didn’t try to label it, honestly. Let’s say it’s a novel.

      Like

      • December 19, 2021 at 12:25 pm

        It’s confusing because it sounds more like a real life than an imagined story.

        Like

        • December 19, 2021 at 10:35 pm

          I understand how it can be. I didn’t question that aspect, took it as fiction based on real people.

          Like

  2. December 19, 2021 at 2:10 pm

    That sounds like a powerful story. If it is in fact fictionalised biography/family memoir then I will look it up to see if I can get hold of it.

    Like

    • December 19, 2021 at 10:36 pm

      It’s a powerful story and the audiobook, if well-read, must be quite powerful too. Betty has a unique voice and to hear it aloud must be pretty special.

      Let’s say that it’s like My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin. It’s a novel based on real life.

      Like

  3. December 19, 2021 at 8:34 pm

    That sounds such a powerful read (and a great book group read: how did you happen upon it for the book group?). Also “one should never write their best-of-the-year post before the year is truly ended” is so true – I almost invariably read something amazing between Christmas and New Yeah, although occasionally, it’s spilled over and been in my top ten for the next year!

    Like

    • December 19, 2021 at 10:45 pm

      It is a powerful read and it was easy to find : it is a huge success in France. It won several literary prizes.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. December 19, 2021 at 10:34 pm

    Such a heartrending story written about so beautifully. Landon’s telling of the Three Sisters tale brought to mind a book I read this year, Laia Jufresa’s ‘Umami’ set in Mexico City and how the tradition of planting those three crops together is passed along to a younger character in that book also.

    Like

    • December 19, 2021 at 10:47 pm

      I love the cross-read reference, thanks for that.
      How successful was it in the USA? I haven’t any other review by American bloggers.

      Liked by 1 person

      • December 21, 2021 at 1:02 am

        I don’t know the answer to your question, but from everything I’ve come across about the book, it’s universally praised and has a very high rating on Goodreads if that means anything.

        It was released during the difficult publishing year of 2020 though, so I’m guessing it probably didn’t get as much of a marketing push as it would in a normal year.

        Like

        • December 21, 2021 at 9:59 pm

          Fair enough. I’ve seen the praise from newspapers but nothing by the bloggers I follow.

          Liked by 1 person

  5. December 21, 2021 at 9:27 am

    This sounds stunning, so moving. In the quotes you pulled the voice is so strong. I’ll look out for this – on a shallow note, it’s a shame I can’t get the original cover here, I much prefer it!

    Like

    • December 21, 2021 at 10:01 pm

      It is a very moving book and the beautiful portrait of a unique Dad and of a girl who is smart and resilient.

      I think that’s the UK paperback edition. The hardcover may be the same as the original American cover. It’s Betty’s picture on the cover, though.

      Liked by 1 person

      • December 21, 2021 at 11:02 pm

        Ah, I didn’t realise it was actually her – that’s a more understandable choice then. I like it more now!

        Liked by 1 person

  1. December 24, 2021 at 5:35 pm
  2. January 8, 2022 at 7:39 pm
  3. February 8, 2022 at 7:41 pm
  4. May 15, 2022 at 9:50 am

I love to hear your thoughts, thanks for commenting. Comments in French are welcome

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