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  • 193 páginas
  • 7 horas de lectura

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In the light of the declining sun, amid the muffled sounds of grazing cattle, a Southern California cowgirl considers her life. The language of November Grass , concise yet evocative, transports readers to the coastal hills of San Diego County, where hawks and jays, calves and kittens, and an assortment of backcountry eccentrics bring clarity to questions of birth, death, and love. In the new introduction, Ursula K. Le Guin writes, ''Van der Veer gives us a rural landscape as deeply known and lived in as Willa Cather's Nebraska or Sara Jewett's Maine. The valley ranches of John Steinbeck's Red Pony and East of Eden are natural comparisons, but Van der Veer's picture is truer, I think, to the patient obscurity of the lives and deaths of those who live on and from this austere land... Pain, suffering, grief are intense in her story, but not more intense than tenderness and praise.''

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November Grass, Judy van der Veer, Ursula K. Le Guin

Idioma
Publicado en
2001
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Tapa blanda),
Estado del libro
Bueno
Precio
10,99 €

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Idioma
Inglés
Editorial
Heyday Books
Publicado en
2001
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
193
ISBN10
1890771392
ISBN13
9781890771393
Serie
Calificación
3,95 de 5
Descripción
In the light of the declining sun, amid the muffled sounds of grazing cattle, a Southern California cowgirl considers her life. The language of November Grass , concise yet evocative, transports readers to the coastal hills of San Diego County, where hawks and jays, calves and kittens, and an assortment of backcountry eccentrics bring clarity to questions of birth, death, and love. In the new introduction, Ursula K. Le Guin writes, ''Van der Veer gives us a rural landscape as deeply known and lived in as Willa Cather's Nebraska or Sara Jewett's Maine. The valley ranches of John Steinbeck's Red Pony and East of Eden are natural comparisons, but Van der Veer's picture is truer, I think, to the patient obscurity of the lives and deaths of those who live on and from this austere land... Pain, suffering, grief are intense in her story, but not more intense than tenderness and praise.''