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Off the Shelf
By Kate Mayfield
| Thursday, May 29, 2014
Kate Mayfield was raised in a Kentucky funeral home. Her
memoir, The Undertaker's Daughter,
will be published by Gallery Books in January 2015. Here she writes about
great (and spooky) graveyards that have characterized some of the finest
novels in history. Visit xoxafterdark for
more by Kate.
The Freshly Dug Grave
In The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain, two boys
sneak out of bed and steal away into the midnight air in search of devils
in the graveyard. What could possibly go wrong? Tom and Huck huddle behind
a tree petrified as three men approach the mound of a fresh grave. Hidden
from view, they watch in horror as men they recognize from town strike the
grave with their shovels and begin digging up a corpse. When the job is
done, one of the grave robbers demands extra payment. A fight ensues, a
murder is committed, the weapon being a headstone no less, and the only
witnesses to the crime flee in terror. All this in Twain’s inimitable
voice.
The Victorian Graveyard that Still Exists
There is a London bus route that skirts the edge of the
magnificent Highgate Cemetery where tombstones haphazardly protrude behind
a black iron fence only hinting that the finest funerary architecture in
the England lies within it. Since 1839 the famous and the unknown have been
interred at Highgate and it is still open for burial. Full of Victorian
Gothic tombs, mausoleums, gravestones, catacombs, chapels, home to the
wildlife of a nature reserve and the remains of over 170,000 deceased, is
it any wonder that an author should bestow Highgate Cemetery with the same
importance as a character? In Her
Fearful Symmetry, a set of American mirror twins are
bequeathed an apartment in London that overlooks the cemetery. And so
the story begins…
The White Tomb
“I knelt down by the tomb. I laid my hands, I laid my head on
the broad white stone, and closed my weary eyes on the earth around, on the
light above. I let her come back to me.”
Oh those Victorian authors who bind us to the pages through their intimacy
with death! A much beloved novel by one of the kings of tension fiction, The
Woman in White's graveside scenes of veiled women and ghosts is an
exquisite classic in every sense.
The Reluctant Gravedigger's Home
Joyce Carol Oates’s novel of violence, reinvention, and the
absence of personal history begins with a scorching visceral description of
the life of a reluctant gravedigger. This is a gritty novel, the grains of
which settle in the mind like the dirt of a grave - not easily washed away.
The story soon moves away from the cemetery in a small town south of
Niagara Falls where the Schwart family live in a cottage on the grounds,
but not before tragedy occurs, perpetrated by Jacob Schwart, who was forced
to seek his abhorred employment after he and his family fled the Nazis in
1936. The smell of the earth where the dead are buried, the mud that is
caked in the creases of his trousers, the dirt that stains the skin under
his nails, and the family’s polluted drin... READ
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