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Ellen Foster

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Ellen Foster is a novel by Kaye Gibbons first published in 1987. It is the story of Ellen, the first person narrator, a young white girl living under unfavourable conditions somewhere in the rural South of the United States. The reader can follow her life over the course of a bit more than two years. A sequel, "Ellen Foster and the Ivy League Serpent" was published in 2005.

This book was chosen to be an Oprah Book Club® Selection in October of 1997. (ISBN 1565122054)

Plot

Ellen is an only child who does not have a real home, even at the time when both her parents are still alive. Her father is "trash" and has a drinking problem, and the whole atmosphere is one of domestic violence. Her mother has a heart condition and, when the novel opens, has to stay in hospital. From an early age on, Ellen's thoughts centre on how she could get rid of her father—she imagines killing him one way or another. When her mother is released from hospital Ellen's father treats her as badly as before, and it is up to Ellen to protect her mother from him. Soon, however, she takes an overdose of pills and dies while Ellen is lying in her bed next to hers.

After her mother's premature death Ellen, who is now "nine or ten", takes charge of the meagre household finances. From now on, she starts accumulating money, which she thinks she will need to have a better start later in life. (Towards the end of the novel, when she moves in with her "new mama", she has already saved $166.) In spite of her unhappy childhood Ellen is a smart girl; she borrows books from the library and is rather creative when it comes to spending her sparetime. Her best friend is Starletta, a young African American girl whose parents are even poorer than herself. She is attracted to them although she has been brought up detesting "niggers" and although she herself cannot overcome all the racial prejudice that has been inculcated in her mind all her life. For example, she says she would never sleep in a "colored house". Also, she refuses to eat or drink anything when she is at Starletta's, remembering the myth that if you use the same glass or cup as "niggers", the germs they have left on it will spread onto your lips and you will turn as dark as them.

On the other hand, her father himself has his "colored buddies" with whom he drinks. Ellen's odyssey (almost in a picaresque vein) starts when Ellen decides she can stand her father and his friends no longer.

Ellen Foster is not written in standard English. It is often grammatically inexact (a egg sandwich, growed, etc.) and generally tries to render the language of a twelve year-old girl who, in spite of being clever and ambitious, is relatively uneducated.

There is no hint anywhere in the novel as to when exactly the action takes place. It is clearly set after World War II, but it could be the present (the 1980s) or earlier.

Two time levels are intertwined throughout the book: one presenting Ellen's life from her present point of view, living with her "new mama"; and the other one telling Ellen's story from her mother's death and leading up to the present. The two time levels are united at the end of the novel, when Ellen is about twelve years old.

Edition

 


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