After 22 years as the writer-in-residence at the University of Louisiana, author Ernest J. Gaines looks forward to writing a new chapter in his life. R. Reese Fuller is senior writer for The Times. Phone him at 237-3560, ext. 122, or e-mail him at reese.fuller@timesofacadiana.com.When Ernest J. Gaines was a kid growing up on the banks of False River in Oscar, he never dreamed that he would one day build his home alongside the big house of the plantation on which he was raised. In the town of Oscar, south of New Roads in Pointe Coupee Parish, the bare trees extend into the gray sky overhead. The open fields, once planted in cotton, corn and potatoes, are now planted in sugar cane and soybeans. It's the land of Gaines' fictional Bayonne, the setting of his stories depicting Louisiana early in the century, when black and white sharecroppers worked the land of River Lake Plantation.
Gaines looks out over the land. He's a tall man, wearing his signature beret and an amulet around his neck. At 70 years old, he uses a cane whenever he can. In the last decade, his arthritis has become worse and it's harder for him to get around. He's soft-spoken, but his voice is deep. "This is my world," he says. "This is my country. This is what I write about. This is my dream. This is my home."