Tonight my favorite movie is on and though I’ve seen it a hundred times, I’m watching it again. I was one of those that watched the movie before I read the book, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe. I read it from cover to cover in one sitting, as my little kids played around my feet. While they ate their meals. While I changed their diapers. While I bathed them. And after I put the to bed.
The children grew older, and as they did, we bed shared. For comfort, yes, but also for closeness and for me the possibility that I might get a full nights sleep so I could function at work the next day. Often, the cats and a dog or two would crawl in there with us.
After the little ones settled and fell asleep, and before I’d drift off, I’d grab my dog eared copy of Fried Green Tomatoes and devour a chapter. I knew every word, yet the story continued to resonate within me. Was I born in the South in a previous life? Why did the story of Ruth and Idgie effect me so deeply?
I began to know every word of the story, yet I couldn’t put it down. The book fell apart, yet I continued to read it. I would jump from story to story without missing a beat. I felt the promise of new life when Buddy was born, and the sadness of love lost when Ruth died. I felt anger so intense when there was racism, and when Idgie was accused and tried for murder I cried.
As my children grew older and took to their own bedrooms, I continued to read the book. It was now in pieces and I had to tape most of the pages together. I swear to you some nights when I read the stories, I could feel the heat of the day on my skin, while tendrils of my hair blew in the humid Alabama air. Train whistles blew and sweat poured down my back. I was dressed in white cotton, sitting on my front porch, and drinking sweet tea. When I’d finally fall asleep, I’d dream I was as tough as Towanda, that brilliant woman unafraid to bait her own hook and love the woman that was meant to be hers forever.
The kids are grown now, and the copy of my book is long gone. I think about replacing it, but something always sidetracks me. Maybe it’s the fact that I can’t get that time back. Or maybe it’s the fact that I want to write like that, but can’t. Or maybe I can write like that, but I’m afraid to fail. All I know is I’ll watch Fried Green Tomatoes tonight and it will make me feel all the things I used to feel. Maybe I’ll finally start that book. Or maybe, I’ll just know that my soul, it was born in the South, and it will have to be enough.
OH!!! One of my very favorite books of all time. I loved the movie as well.
Then my darling we are most definitely kindred spirits.
I just love it so! The strength, the laughter, the history – just absolutely everything about it.
I’m with you babe. I feel the exact same way.
The stories that resonate to our very center have a tendency to show us things about ourselves we would otherwise have never known.
I agree wholeheartedly. For some reason my heart aches for stories that originate in the south. I swear, my past originates there.
Never read the book but did see the movie and really liked that
The book is so much more involved than the movie. It holds a very special place in my heart.
Seems strange, at times, doesn’t it? I feel the same whenever I watch “Bicentennial Man”. I live in that book. I have a separate part I play. I get the girl. I know all the words. I haven’t watched it in a while, now, I may need to. Thx.
I said “book”, but it’s the movie.
I have not read the book or seen the movie, but I will now.
Your passion for it is so uplifting that I must!
Thank you for sharing this slice of your life.
Thank you for reading.
I watch this movie every single year (more than once sometimes). I read the book after my first (or was it third?) viewing and loved it as much if not more. I cry. Every. Single. Time!
Idgie, Ruth, Ninny, Evelyn, and Sipsey feel like they are members of my family! I can recite the whole movie almost verbatim. My boys don’t even blink any more when they see I’m watching it, yet again!
OK. I’m going back to reread it now… π
Good for you Dale. It’s a terrific story isn’t it? It proves that love is simple. Even during such a tumultuous time.
Love, Renee
Absolutely!