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Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus |
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THE LAND BREAKERS
Set deep in the Appalachian wilderness between the years of 1779 and 1784, THE LAND BREAKERS is a saga like the Norse sagas or the book of Genesis, a story of first and last things, of the violence of birth and death, of inescapable sacrifice and the faltering emergence of community.
Mooney and Imy Wright, twenty-one, former indentured servants, long habituated to backbreaking work but not long married, are traveling west. They arrive in a no-account settlement in North Carolina and, on impulse, part with all their savings to acquire a patch of land high in the mountains. With a little livestock and a handful of crude tools, they enter the mountain worldone of transcendent beauty and cruel necessityand begin to make a world of their own.
Mooney and Imy are the first to confront an unsettled country that is sometimes paradise and sometimes hell. They will soon be followed by others.
John Ehle is a master of the American language. He has an ear for dialogue and an eye for nature and a grasp of character that have established THE LAND BREAKERS as one of the great fictional reckonings with the making of America.
John Ehle (b. 1925) received his BA and MA at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he met the playwright Paul Green and began writing plays for the NBC radio series American Adventure. He taught at the university for ten years before joining the staff of the North Carolina governor Terry Sanford, where Ehle was a one-man think tank, the governor's idea man from 1962 to 1964. He is the author of eleven novels, seven of which constitute his celebrated Mountain Novels cycle, and six works of nonfiction.
Mooney and Imy Wright, twenty-one, former indentured servants, long habituated to backbreaking work but not long married, are traveling west. They arrive in a no-account settlement in North Carolina and, on impulse, part with all their savings to acquire a patch of land high in the mountains. With a little livestock and a handful of crude tools, they enter the mountain worldone of transcendent beauty and cruel necessityand begin to make a world of their own.
Mooney and Imy are the first to confront an unsettled country that is sometimes paradise and sometimes hell. They will soon be followed by others.
John Ehle is a master of the American language. He has an ear for dialogue and an eye for nature and a grasp of character that have established THE LAND BREAKERS as one of the great fictional reckonings with the making of America.
John Ehle (b. 1925) received his BA and MA at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he met the playwright Paul Green and began writing plays for the NBC radio series American Adventure. He taught at the university for ten years before joining the staff of the North Carolina governor Terry Sanford, where Ehle was a one-man think tank, the governor's idea man from 1962 to 1964. He is the author of eleven novels, seven of which constitute his celebrated Mountain Novels cycle, and six works of nonfiction.
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Book
Published 2014-11-01 by New York Review Books |