Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Ivy Rowes Ideas of the Past in Fair and Tender Ladies Essay -- Englis
Ivy Rowe's Ideas of the Past in Fair and Tender Ladies    In Lee Smith's Fair and Tender Ladies, Ivy Rowe has a constant  attachment to her past. This attachment is one of the main themes in  the novel. It is one of her main reasons for letter writing and why  she does some of the things that she does, because she does not want  to lose her grip on her past. Ivy Rowe, in Lee Smith's Fair and Tender  Ladies, uses letter writing to keep a hold of her grip on the past and  where she came from.    In Letters from Sugar Fork, Ivy writes for a number of reasons. She  wants to see how and what other people are doing, wanting to improve  her writing skills, asking for help from her grandfather at one point,  in addition to just having some way to release all her thoughts and  emotions. These letters, being a window into her mind, show us the  progression of her as she grows. There is one letter in particular,  which shows how important this correspondence is to her. "I hate you,  you do not write back nor be my Pen Friend I think you are the Ice  Queen instead. I do not have a Pen Friend or any friend in the world,  I have only Silvaney who laghs and laghs and Beulah who is mad now all  the time and Ethel who calls a spade a spadeà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦I will not send this  letter as I remain your hateful, Ivy Rowe."(Smith, 17) This letter  shows just how important letter writing is to Ivy. As she is not able  to receive correspondence from Hanneke she cannot fully express  herself and has a hard time with her anger, as is evidence by the  excerpt from her letter.    Ivy also writes to Mrs. Brown about her experiences in Sugar Fork. She  talks about how she shot a gun and is able to paint a vivid picture of  the winter season. "Ice just shining on each and e...              ...her last letter defines her life when she says "Slow down  now, slow down now Ivy. This is the taste of spring. I never have  slowed down." This shows her need to continue and persevere through  all she has been through. Ivy as a character goes through a lot in her  life and by writing these letters and expelling all her feelings and  emotions onto the paper she was able to find a sort of peace with her  existence.    Bibliography:    Henderson, Lara Beth A True Storyteller: Appalachia's own Lee Smith  October 1, 2000,  http://www.etsu.edu/haleyd/engl3134/ejournal/henderson.html    Robbins, Dorothy Dodge "Personal and Cultural Transformation: Letter  Writing in Lee Smith's 'Fair and Tender Ladies'" Critique: Studies in  Contemporary Fiction (Winter 1997, Volume 38 n.2): p. 135    Hill, Dorothy Combs "An Interview with Lee Smith" The Southern  Quarterly 28.2(1990):5-19                      
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