Texas A&M University Press


Joshua Beene and God
by Jewel Gibson
Introduction by Sylvia Ann Grider

A critic once observed that "Jewel Gibson is a writer with two tongues, one for each cheek." Gibson's rollickingly funny first novel, Joshua Beene and God, first published in 1946, revealed a writer whose handling of the earthy and comic was as deft as her remarkable ability to capture the colorful sights, sounds, and language of East Texas life.

Praised as superb satire by critics and damned as wicked by more than one Texas community, this novel follows one curmudgeonly religious leader's crusade against Spring Creek's Baptists, Holy Rollers, and nonbelievers. Joshua Ebenezer Beene, as chief elder of the Church of Christ of Spring Creek Community, president of the school board, justice of the peace, and self-appointed game warden, regularly summons God to seek advice on how to carry out his crusade—which, as the novel opens, has taken on a special urgency. Alerted by the Biblical admonition that "the days of our years are three score years and ten," Joshua believes he has one final year among the living to claim victory in his long-running battle with the town sinners before claiming his heavenly reward.

Gently satirical without being mocking, Joshua Beene and God has been called "humorous—but surprisingly reverent" in its comic portrayal of religious and political struggle in a small East Texas town. Now once again available, with a new foreword by Sylvia Ann Grider, this provocatively funny and entertaining novel by one of Texas' leading women writers invites rediscovery by today's readers.

JEWEL GIBSON (1904–89) wrote a second novel, Black Gold; nine plays; a musical; and a number of newspaper feature stories. She taught for forty-three years at the high school and college levels.


Joshua Beene and God
0-89096-797-0 paper $14.95

LC 97-33407. 5x7 3/4. 266 pp.
Western Writing and Criticism. Texana. Fiction.

Publication Date: October 1997.



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