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Barren Ground by Ellen Glasgow
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Barren Ground (Virago modern classics)

by Ellen Glasgow

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110255,837 (3.58)13
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Virago Press Ltd (2000), Edition: New edition, Paperback, 416 pages

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3997. Barren Ground, by Ellen Glasgow (read 15 March 2005) I own a book, 100 Great American Novels, published in 1966--and this is one of those 100 and with this reading I have now read 86 of the 100. This is a 1925 book, laid in rural Virginia. The first part of the book tells of a girl who falls in love with a boy, they plan to marry, and he marries another--the account is powerful and evocative of "place" and I was much impressed. The rest of the book was not as interest-holding. This is the third novel of Glasgow's I have read (The Romantic Comedians was read 25 Jan 1956 and when I finished I said to myself "This is the first book I have ever read of Ellen Glasgow, and assuredly it will be the last." But when I was 'doing' Pulitzer Prize winners I read (12 Aug 1958) her winner, In This Our Life, and now I have read this, her most famous book, so one never should say never, I guess. ( )
  Schmerguls | Oct 14, 2007 |
Galsgow, Ellen. Barren Ground.
  BrianDewey | Jul 30, 2007 |
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For Rebe Glasgow Tutwiler
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A girl in an orange-coloured shawl stood at the window of Pedlar's store and looked, through the falling snow, at the deserted road.
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Book description
Set in 1925, this is the story of Dorinda Oakley. As a young woman she works in a general store whilst her parents eke out their existence on the starved Virginian land. To Dorinda, Jason Greylock seems to offer an escape from this monotony and she falls in love with him. But Jason seduces and then abandons her. For years Dorinda strives to quieten the bitterness of rejection. Turning back to the land, she works the soil with the intensity of feeling she offered Jason and, as a middle-aged woman, emerges, triumphant, self-possessed. Described by Ellen Glasgow as a work by which she would like to be judged as a novelist, this is a strong and deterministic work. "For once in Southern fiction" she wrote, "the betrayed woman would become the victor instead of the victim."

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 015610685X, Paperback)

Set in Virginia, this novel evokes the irony of change in the rural South. Dorinda Oakley is a passionate, intelligent, and independent young woman struggling to define herself.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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