Current:Home > ContactJeannette Walls' 'Hang the Moon' transports readers to Prohibition -FutureFinance
Jeannette Walls' 'Hang the Moon' transports readers to Prohibition
View
Date:2025-04-13 18:34:25
The word Prohibition often conjures up the images of gangsters in three-piece suits, Ford Model T cars, jazz music blaring in glamorous speakeasies, and Al Capone. It's a fascinating time in American history and lovers of stories about the exchange of sex, money, and power between the haves and the have-nots, find the time period insatiable.
That's why Boardwalk Empire claimed 64 awards during its HBO run.
A movement originally driven by religious groups, Prohibition banned the manufacturing, transportation, and sale of liquor, which was seen as immoral and ungodly and therefore needed to be eradicated. The enforcement of Prohibition was difficult for both federal and local governments. With the closing of factories and other businesses that made or sold liquor, people were out of jobs and the quality of life further decreased for many middle- and lower-class people. Rural communities were hit hardest by these laws, even though a few supported Prohibition.
This is where Jeannette Walls' brilliant and effervescent new novel Hang the Moon transports us. Claiborne County, rural Virginia. 1920s. This car-chasing, shootout-filled story follows the rise of Sallie Kincaid, a fiery protagonist who has enough heart and grit to single-handedly carry her family business and her county on her back when given the chance. Walls' drama-filled page-turner barrels through a few storylines, touching on a fraught battle over family business succession, racial tension in a poor rural county, family secrets, and land conflict, all with the prohibition war looming as its backdrop.
The novel begins nine years after Sallie was cast out of the family home by her father Duke Kincaid, at the behest of his wife Jane, for accidentally injuring her younger brother Eddie — Jane's only son. At Jane's death, the Duke brings Sallie back to Claiborne County to take care of timid, oversensitive Eddie. Independent and sharp with strong ambitions like her father, 17-year-old Sallie is determined to carve a space for herself in her family's business, Kincaid Holdings — real estate, lumber mills, hauling company, the Emporium store, and bootlegging. She yearns for her father's blessing and trust; she wants to be seen as capable to handle the rigors of leadership even though she's a woman.
Sallie's as good as the Duke at spinning words and she convinces him to hire her as his wheelman, a tempestuous task where she collects rent and runs errands for him. A man's job, according to the Duke. It's one small step for Sallie but the line of succession, the Kincaid way, is for men to rule.
During the prohibition era, the temperance movement — run by religious women — played a substantial role in attempting to uphold the laws. They strongly supported Prohibition because they saw alcohol as destructive to families and marriages. As Walls' story progresses, there is much tension between the success of the business and those in power who support the temperance movement.
Sallie's defining moment in the story, comes as she decides what morality means for her instead of standing by as outsiders determined what is moral for her county.
The most satisfying thing about this novel is Walls' excellent construction of the main female characters. Each of them represents women from varying walks of life, each fighting for their own place in a male-dominated world. Mattie's intelligent and business-savvy and is unhappy being just a sheriff's wife, but understands her role and remains steadfast — even though she's constantly vocal about being overlooked. Sallie's half-sister Mary could be ripped right out of the Tudor history books. Mary is pious, fiercely loyal to her husband, religious, and misguidingly ruthless just like Mary Tudor, better known as Bloody Mary. Sallie herself bares a resemblance to a few female bootleggers in history, not letting her womanhood limit her aspirations. Unlike her aunt and her sister, Sallie refuses to have a man by her side and rewrites the rules as she goes along.
Walls has written a stunning and compelling tale — not surprising considering the acclaim she received for her memoir The Glass Castle. The novel Hang the Moon gives us a chance to think about something that hasn't gotten much attention — the lives of women bootleggers in America.
Keishel Williams is a Trinidadian American book reviewer, arts & culture writer, and editor.
veryGood! (7921)
Related
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Mark Zuckerberg Reacts to His Photoshopped Thirst Trap Photo
- California man goes missing after hiking in El Salvador, family pleads for help finding him
- Why FedEx's $25 million NIL push is 'massive step forward' for Memphis Tigers sports
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- NBA playoff games today: How to watch, predictions for Game 1s on Saturday
- Tennessee schools would have to out transgender students to parents under bill heading to governor
- Halloweentown Costars Kimberly J. Brown and Daniel Kountz Are Married
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Who dies in 'Rebel Moon 2: The Scargiver'? We tally the dead and the reborn. (Spoilers!)
Ranking
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- We're Making a Splash With This Aquamarine Cast Check In
- WADA says 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive before Tokyo Olympics but it accepted contamination finding
- North Carolina officer fatally shoots man suspected of killing other man
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- California man goes missing after hiking in El Salvador, family pleads for help finding him
- NHL playoff overtime rules: Postseason hockey bracket brings major change to OT
- Get Your Activewear Essentials for Less at Kohl’s, Including Sales on Nike, Adidas, Champions & More
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Oregon lodge famously featured in ‘The Shining’ will reopen to guests after fire forced evacuations
What is cloud seeding and did it play any role in the Dubai floods?
Autoworkers union celebrates breakthrough win in Tennessee and takes aim at more plants in the South
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
The drug war devastated Black and other minority communities. Is marijuana legalization helping?
Trump Media tells Nasdaq short sellers may be using potential market manipulation in DJT shares
Taylor Swift's 'Tortured Poets Department' and when lyrics about dying, grief, heartbreak trigger you