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5/29/02
A
tale like no other takes readers on an enjoyable ride
By
Sara Jenkins
The
Shining Shining Path by Carroll Dale Short.
Montgomery, AL: Black Belt Press, 1995.
$25 — 400 pp.
If summer reading means books that are fun, fast-paced,
satisfying and different from what we read during the year, this
debut novel should qualify. I was skeptical about the peach and
lime green cover, but the first sentence hooked me.
By the time the blue Chrysler van carrying the six Tibetan
monks finally got around the jackknifed poultry truck on Interstate
80 and found the exit to Kennesaw College, the program chairman
at the Pride of the Prairie was in such a state of agitation that
she had to go to the bathroom and splash cold water on her face,
and, moreover, take the last two Midol she had been saving for Intro
to Volleyball at three oclock that afternoon.
The loping Southern cadence reminds me of T. R. Pearson, but the
plot moves far beyond the rural locale. The first chapter sweeps
us into mystery, and by the end of the book, action explodes phantasmagorically
in every direction. Along the way are suspense, romance, a cosmic
battle between good and evil, and humor both high and low. Turner,
the reluctant hero, is a Vietnam vet who has become a rock-and-roll
impresario. He has taken on a strange assignment: driving a band
of Tibetan monks around the South to perform their traditional sacred
music. From backstage, Turner observes the audiences:
... bland, self-possessed, self-pleasuring Western faces
come suddenly upon an outrageous bump of an idea smack in the middle
of the smooth, complacent highway of their existence: a race of
people [Tibetans] whose artists and athletes, saints and scientists
and warriors are one and the same in intent; a civilization whose
single transcendent striving is the painstaking eradication of self.
The Self, our pampered pet ... namesake of magazines, theology of
television advertising, sweet ringing gloss of exterior life that
almost, almost screens out the insistent siren of contradiction
and wonder wailing from the delicate underbelly of the universe
like a million expiring Met tenors.
One of the more colorful descriptions of what Buddhism is all about,
this says, in essence, that our illusion of being selves
separate from all else cuts us off from the true joy of life. The
monks performance — like the book — embraces the
range from the ineffably sweet music of the spheres to sounds that
may not be named in, as they say, a family magazine. The author
of this book, however, does not flinch from naming it all, for this
is a story that unfolds along the full spectrum of human need, self-deception,
courage, and extraordinary capacities, including the superhuman.
Among the irresistible cast of characters, the Tibetan monks are
especially endearing, in their simple lightness of spirit, their
enigmatic wisdom, their wiles and their individual quirks. Cassie,
the heroine, is no less feisty for being confined to a wheelchair.
James Crowe, an African-American whose path crossed Turners
when they served together in Vietnam, is a genius in super-math,
numerical manipulation beyond the bounds of the material plane.
Along with other vividly drawn characters, they inhabit a comfortably
familiar New South, while the story careens back and forth in time
and space. In a flashback to 1963, Turner and Cassie are idealistic
15-year-olds attending a meeting at their country church. The church
members discuss a plan to avoid racial integration — in the
words of the preacher, this civil riot business —
by posting guards at the church door to turn away black people.
Cassie questions how this fits with what is written in the Bible,
but the preacher changes the subject. The next Sunday Cassie takes
Turner to the nearby black church, where she responds to the altar
call and becomes the only white member. The chapter ends with a
heart-wrenching scene, when the preacher from the black church comes
to her house with news about the bombing of the 16th Street church
in Birmingham, 30 miles away, in which four children were killed.
The deacons ... and myself have, ah ... He looked
at the floor again. Lord God, its hard for me to say
this ... Weve discussed the ... situation, this, ah, sad way
the world is going, and its our feeling that its not,
ah, a propitious time for a church of our color to be attracting
attention unduly by, ah ...
Meaning me, Cassie said.
He dabbed his big handkerchief to the corners of both eyes. Please,
maam, understand our hearts ... Just for a while ... till
things gets better. It cant go on like this. This way is death.
Cassie nodded.
Well pray for you, the preacher said. This
bad old world needs you.
Lest these excerpts suggest that the book consists mainly of improbably
long sentences, arcane subjects and the agony of our racial history,
let me say that they are balanced by a wealth of other events and
themes and leavened with a wonderful wit. The conjunction of Southern
and Tibetan cultures, for example, offers rich comic opportunities.
The Tibetans exposure to American life has been mainly through
television, and when a sheriff gives Turner a speeding ticket, one
monk, mimicking what hes seen on Miami Vice, pretends
to snort cocaine from his palm, while the others shout gleefully,
Mammy Vice! Mammy Vice! Rest this man! —
resulting in a trip to the local jail. The authors style ranges
from a natural effusiveness to linguistic subtlety, making the very
process of reading a pleasure, down to the level of single cleverly
chosen words. I laughed, cried and marveled throughout at Shorts
exuberant imagination. If ever a book was meant for film, surely
this is it. How would Hollywood cast it? Billy Bob Thornton, Meg
Ryan, and Samuel L. Jackson? Tommy Lee Jones, Julia Roberts, and
Forrest Whittaker? Certainly it would feature real Tibetan monks,
á la The Cup, and special effects á la
Steven Spielberg. The fast way takes so long you die,
says one of the monks, chiding Turner about the American habit of
rushing and thereby missing out on life. Ultimately, The Shining
Shining Path raises possibilities of there being far more to
life than we ordinarily know — and all of it existing within
our own minds. At the same time, it opens our hearts to what we
cannot deny, our need for one another, our profound connectedness,
our yearning for the truest love. In the end, I was even won over
by the cover. The picture shows a man sunk in thought amid what
looks like a Southeast Asian temple, with lotuses, incense and holographic
images of Buddhist deities imposed on a Southern landscape. (A note
on the jacket identifies it as a painting called Extreme Southeast
Georgia by Don Cooper, in the Morris Museum of Art in Augusta.)
Like the story, the cover embraces the exotic with a personal, close-to-home,
heartfelt authenticity. In fact, I would have to say that its
a perfect cover for a book that is like none Ive ever read.
(Sara Jenkins is the author of This Side of Nirvana: Memoirs
of a Spiritually Challenged Buddhist. A freelance editor and
book packager, she lives at Lake Junaluska)
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