Book Review: It Wasn’t All Dancing and Other Stories by Mary Ward Brown

In It Wasn’t All Dancing and Other Stories (Univ. of Alabama Press, 2001), her second story collection, Mary Ward Brown continues the exploration of small-town and rural Alabama life that she began in Tongues of Flame.  The central theme of these stories is age and change.  Brown considers these themes through stories about widows coping with isolation and uncertainty and through stories of others unsettled by change.  The title story is told from the sickbed of a once vivacious and (by her own account) self-centered woman, Rose Merriweather, who knows she will soon die.  She virtually never gets out of bed.  She must cope with her own concerns of memory loss and identity along with the knowledge that her daughter (who has little to do with her) is gradually selling off family possessions to pay the cost of caring for her ailing mother. The friendship that Rose tries to develop with the black nurse who is taking care of her allows Brown to explore another facet of changing race relations in the rural South. 

Some of these stories are contemporary while others range back as far as the 1950s.  Many concern disappointments of one sort or another.  In “The Birthday Cake,” the narrator and her older sister come to terms with a close friend’s death.  In another, “Once in a Lifetime,” a woman once considered the most beautiful girl in her high school lives in a small apartment with her adolescent daughter. She is divorced after an unhappy marriage to an abusive husband.  While working in a restaurant, she meets a man from her high school who admits to having always been attracted to her. They begin an affair, and at last the woman is truly happy, but when her young daughter becomes pregnant she breaks off the relationship.  The whole focus of the story falls on the woman’s disappointment in life. It is reminiscent of some of the stories in Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, especially those concerned with the character Kate Swift, though Brown’s stories are less intense and psychologically intrusive than Anderson’s. 

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Article Author: Hugh Ruppersburg

Hugh Ruppersburg lives and works in Athens, Georgia.

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  • It Wasn't All Dancing and Other Stories (Deep South Books) It Wasn't All Dancing and Other Stories (Deep South Books)

    With the 11 stories in this popular collection, Mary Ward Brown offers her devoted fans a palette of true literary pleasures. The hallmarks of her style - the fully realized characters, her deep ...

  • It Wasn't All Dancing and Other Stories (Deep South Books) It Wasn't All Dancing and Other Stories (Deep South Books)

    With the 11 stories in this popular collection, Mary Ward Brown offers her devoted fans a palette of true literary pleasures. The hallmarks of her style - the fully realized characters, her deep ...

  • Tongues of Flame (Deep South Books) Tongues of Flame (Deep South Books)

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