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The Tragedy of Brady Sims Reader’s Guide

By Ernest J. Gaines

The Tragedy of Brady Sims by Ernest J. Gaines

The Tragedy of Brady Sims Reader’s Guide

By Ernest J. Gaines

Category: Literary Fiction | Crime Fiction

READERS GUIDE

The questions, discussion topics, and suggestions for further reading that follow are designed to enhance your group’s reading of Ernest J. Gaines’s The Tragedy of Brady Sims, a beautifully wrought portrait of small-town life in the post–World War II American South. 

Introduction

Set in the fictional town of Bayonne, Louisiana—the setting for Gaines’s award-winning A Lesson Before Dying and several other works—The Tragedy of Brady Sims opens with a startling shooting at the local courthouse. The shooter is Brady Sims; the victim, his son, Jean-Pierre. Sims announces that he needs two hours before being taken to jail. Although he is frustrated and furious about the murder, Sheriff Mapes unhesitatingly agrees to Sims’s request. Louis Guerin, a young African American reporter assigned to write a human interest story on Sims, discovers a rich source of information among the owners and patrons of the local barbershop. As they tell their stories, the history of blacks and whites in their small town and the intimate ties that shape the relationships between them come vividly to life. 

Questions and Topics for Discussion

1.  What does the conversation between Ambrose Cunningham and Louis Guerin convey about editor’s vs. the reporter’s understanding and opinion of the racial undercurrents that shape interactions in Bayonne (p. 11)? What does Cunningham’s reaction to the sheriff’s decision to let Sims remain free show about his understanding of how things work in the town (p. 11)?
 
2.  Discuss the various contradictory emotions behind Sheriff Mapes’s response to the events at the courthouse. How do they reflect and amplify the role of personal history in the town’s social structure (pp. 18–20)?
 
3.  Guerin begins his investigation by talking to the only black member of the jury, Mr. A. Paul (pp. 14–16). How would you characterize the way Mr. Paul is drawn? What is Gaines’s intent in presenting this portrait of an elderly African American?
 
4.  “Since the turn of the nineteenth century, beauty salons and barbershops have served as special places among African Americans. . . . Scholars often cite these sites as ‘sanctuaries’ for black people” (The National Museum of African American History and Culture). In what ways does Lucas Felix’s embody the timeless cultural and social functions of the local barbershop (pp. 22-23)? Can you think of other works of literature or movies that feature beauty salons or barbershops as a central part of an African American community?
 
5.  What does the way the men treat Guerin show about the group dynamics at the barbershop (pp. 23–24)? What role does the stranger (“the man with the fresh haircut,” p. 32) play in bringing to light the close ties among others? What other functions does he serve as the novel unfolds?
 
6.    Frank Jamison calls Sims “the man who whipped children to keep them out of Angola” (p. 25) and notes that “some of the old people would rather see their children dead than to go to Angola” (p. 26). Can you understand this point of view? Discuss the reasons the preacher and the members of the church offer for giving Sims the job of disciplining troublesome kids (p. 38). Is there a valid argument that the threat of incarceration (especially in a notorious prison like Angola) calls for extreme preventative actions on the part of the community?
 
7.    What do the facts about Sims’s life with Eula and their children (pp. 47–53) and the story of his marriage to Betty Mae and relationship with Jean-Pierre (pp. 58–60) reveal about his character and the emotions that drive him? Despite the fraught circumstances, are there aspects of Sims’s behavior that make him likable or sympathetic?
 
8.    Jamison says, “Brady was getting older, getting older, and he moved out of the quarter back into the field . . . he just wanted to get away from those ‘quarter niggers’” (pp. 62–63). Discuss persistent racial biases as well as the specific events behind Sims’s decision to move to an isolated farmhouse. Does his new life alter the way he sees himself and is seen by others?
 
9.   Raised in California, Jean-Pierre returns to Louisiana and his father’s house. What does his approach to finding work and the reactions he gets around town show about generational and regional differences in mid-twentieh-century America (pp. 64–76)? Why does Sims insist that Jean-Pierre leave his house and move into town?
 
10.   What does the introduction of the men from California looking for “Louisiana Roy” add to the novel? How do the descriptions of the men in the car, the “sissies” they encounter, and the ins-and-outs of their search of the area differ in tone and mood from the earlier vignettes (pp. 77–85)?
 
11.   In what ways does the bank robbery serve as a fitting climax to Jean-Pierre’s naïve and ill-conceived return to Louisiana?
 
12.    As he goes to arrest Sims for shooting Jean-Pierre, Mapes says, “Why? Why? Why did you do it? Hell, I know why. I damned well know why” (p. 100). Did your feelings about the murder of Jean-Pierre change over the course of the novel as you learned more about Brady Sims and the circumstances of his life?
 
13.    Gaines shifts the point of view of the story to Sheriff Mapes (pp. 99–107). Do Mapes’s musings about the past and the present and about his personal friendship with Sims cast new light on both men and on the community in general? Does the final scene between Mapes and Sims ring true?
 
14.   The impact of World War II and the Great Migration on the African American community is a running topic of discussion at the barbershop. What insights do the differing points of view presented by Frank Jamison and Joe Celestin offer into the changes that occurred in both the South and the North (p. 33)? To what extent do their views represent an on-going debate about the advantages and the disadvantages of city life and small-town life?
 
15.   In his award-winning novel, A Lesson Before Dying, Gaines created a cast of strong women. The characters and voices in The Tragedy of Brady Sims are all male. How does this affect your perspective on the social structures and relationships in the town? In what ways does the switching back and forth among narrative voices, as well as the frequent use of flashbacks, enrich the reading experience?
 
16.   Does the novel add to, change, or contradict your understanding of the African American community in the late 1940s and early ’50s? What does it expose about the entrenched traditions that protect and perpetuate an inherently unjust society? 

About this Author

Ernest J. Gaines was born on a plantation in Pointe Coupee Parish near New Roads, Louisiana, which is the Bayonne of all his fictional works. He is writer-in-residence emeritus at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. He is the author of many books, including A Lesson Before Dying, Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. In 1993 Gaines received the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship for his lifetime achievements. In 1996 he was named a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, one of France’s highest decorations. He and his wife, Dianne, live in Oscar, Louisiana.

Suggested Reading

James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain; Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man; William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury; Chester Himes, If He Hollers Let Him Go; Toni Morrison, Song of Solomon; Alice Walker, The Color Purple; John Edgar Wideman, Sent for You Yesterday; Richard Wright, Uncle Tom’s Children
 
Books by Ernest J. Gaines
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman; Bloodline; In My Father’s House; A Gathering of Old Men; A Lesson Before Dying; Mozart and Leadbelly; Of Love and Dust; Catherine Carmier