Plainsong (Hardcover)

Author: Kent Haruf
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780375406188
Publisher: A. A. Knopf
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Buy.com Sku: 30509315
Item#: R4F3W3
Dimensions (in Inches) 10H x 6.5L x 1.25T
Pages: 320
Edition Number: 1
 
"Here was this man Tom Guthrie in Holt standing at the back window in the kitchen of his house smoking cigarettes and looking out over the back lot where the sun was just coming up..." (from the first line)

Tom Guthrie -- a high school teacher in Holt, Colorado -- faces the problem of raising his two boys, 9 and 10, while their mother retreats first to her bed and then altogether.

Victoria Roubideaux, at 17, has the problem of being pregnant with the father run off to Denver and her own mother (whose husband years ago had disappeared, "maybe to the Rosebud in South Dakota") unwilling to have her in the house.

From these two starting points comes the most engaging small town novel since Richard Russo's Mohawk, this one set in an ultra-American landscape where peoples' fates somehow overcome or indeed are independent of the circumstances of place or station that nonetheless seem so powerful.

Joining Guthrie and the girl in this milieu are a variety of striking characters: another teacher who is drawn to helping them both; the McPheron brothers, two old bachelor farmers who take the girl in; a high school asshole and his equally obnoxious parents, bent on extracting revenge from Tom; the runaway would-be father; and, in the background, all the folks who make up the life, sometimes pleasing, sometimes not, of a small town.

But in the end it is the nature of the principle characters -- their dignity, dilemmas, humor, decency and confusion -- that makes Plainsong so engrossing and rewarding.

From the unsettled lives of three people emerges a vision of life, and of the town and landscape that bind them together. Utterly true to the rhythms and patterns of life, "Plainsong" is a heartstrong story of family and romance, tribulation, and tenacity.
 
Annotation:
In alternating points of view, Haruf chronicles several lives in a small town in Colorado. The plot involves Tom Guthrie, whose wife leaves him with their two little boys; a young pregnant girl who is thrown out of her house by her mother; the elderly McPheron brothers who take her in; and Maggie Jones, Tom's kindhearted colleague.

 

Praise
San Francisco Chronicle Book Review
"Though [Kent Haruf's] third novel, PLAINSONG, is relatively uneventful--a year in the lives of normal folk in the small prairie town of Holt, Colo.--his mesmerizing language draws the reader in, fascinating even with his depictions of the most mundane occurrences....Haruf's haunting, virtuosic writing...is both spare and descriptive, as painstaking in capturing vagueness as it is precise detailing the concrete." - Sarah Saffian 09/26/1999

Chicago Tribune Books
"When was the last time I read an entire novel in two days? Probably 55 years ago, when I was a teenager....[N]ow, half a century later, I've had the delightful experience once again of becoming so absorbed in a book that I couldn't have slowed down if I tried.....The book is Kent Haruf's PLAINSONG, the most controlled, cohesive novel I've come across in a long time....[A]s flawlessly unified as a short story by Poe or Chekhov." - Jon Hassler 10/10/1999

Wall Street Journal
"If a novelist invents a world, then Mr. Haruf has shaped a place of enormous goodness, in which the deprived are grateful for whatever they are given. As these people move from the wrong kind of trouble to the right kind--from isolation toward connectedness--they falter in the sweetest of ways....[B]rusque tenderness is the hallmark of this novel....[T]he story itself -- spare, unsentimental, rooted in action--honors the values of the community it describes." - Lisa Michaels 10/08/1999

New York Times
"[A] plainspoken and moving novel--a novel that weaves together the voices of half a dozen people living in a small Colorado town and turns their overlapping stories into a powerful portrait of a community bound together by history, memory and the simple bonds of neighborly responsibility and affection." - Michiko Kakutani 10/08/1999


 
Author Bio
Kent Haruf
The son of a Methodist preacher, Kent Haruf (rhymes with "sheriff") was a conscientious objector during the Vietnam years, which he spent working in hospitals in lieu of military service. After receiving degrees at Nebraska Wesleyan University (B.A. 1965) and the University of Iowa (M.F.A., 1973), he joined the Peace Corps and taught English to children in a small Turkish village. In addition, he has worked on a chicken ranch in Colorado, at an orphanage in Montana, at a presidential library in Iowa, and at an alternative high school in Wisconsin. He became a college teacher in the late 1980s, and has taught fiction-writing at Southern Illinois University. His stories and novels have received awards from the American Library Association, the PEN-Hemingway Foundation, and the Whiting Foundation. His 1999 novel, PLAINSONG, was an unexpected bestseller. Like many of his works, it takes place on the Great Plains, in the flatlands of northeastern Colorado near the Kansas and Nebraska borders, a part of the country to which Haruf says he has "a holy connection." He has been married twice and has three grown daughters.

 
Awards

National Book Award (1999)
   nominated, Fiction
 

 
 
Read A Chapter

Plainsong

By Kent Haruf

Knopf

Copyright © 1999 Kent Haruf. All rights reserved.
ISBN: 0-375-40618-2



Excerpt


Here was this man Tom Guthrie in Holt standing at the back window in the kitchen of his house smoking cigarettes and looking out over the back lot where the sun was just coming up. When the sun reached the top of the windmill, for a while he watched what it was doing, that increased reddening of sunrise along the steel blades and the tail vane above the wooden platform. After a time he put out the cigarette and went upstairs and walked past the closed door behind which she lay in bed in the darkened guest room sleeping or not and went down the hall to the glassy room over the kitchen where the two boys were.

The room was an old sleeping porch with uncurtained wind

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