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Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver
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Prodigal Summer (original 2000; edition 2000)

by Barbara Kingsolver

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6,522128525 (4)228
Member:catmeyoo
Title:Prodigal Summer
Authors:Barbara Kingsolver
Info:HarperCollins Publishers (2000), Hardcover
Collections:Your library
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Tags:fiction, natural history, Appalachian Mountains

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Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver (2000)

America (25) American (56) American literature (22) Appalachia (198) book club (31) contemporary (24) contemporary fiction (37) coyotes (56) ecology (88) environment (104) family (48) farming (50) favorite (19) fiction (1,032) first edition (20) Kentucky (37) Kingsolver (43) literary fiction (35) literature (42) love (37) nature (168) novel (128) own (49) read (89) relationships (55) romance (32) to-read (63) unread (61) USA (31) women (47)
  1. 40
    The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver (Booksloth, Anonymous user)
  2. 10
    State of Wonder by Ann Patchett (BillPilgrim)
    BillPilgrim: I heard the comparison/recommendation here: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/07/25/midmorning2/
  3. 00
    Where the Wild Things Were by William Stolzenburg (Othemts)
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Showing 1-5 of 126 (next | show all)
I just finished it yesterday, and am tempted to read it again before I release it. It was that good; I ususally don't read books twice.

This is an excellently written novel entwining the lives of three "pairs": Deanna and Eddy, Lusa and Cole, and Nannie and Garnett, a den of coyotes, and all of the farming community of Egg Fork and the wilderness of Zebulon Mountain. The women are the nurturers who care strongly about every wild creature and how they all fit into the ecosystem. They vainly try to convince the men, who are the hunters and destroyers, killing predators and poisoning the environment with chemicals. We become deeply involved in their lives and their passions, physical and emotional. Gradually the three threads come together as we see how they are connected to one another, even to the detail of a pair of brocade armchairs. ( )
  FancyHorse | May 16, 2013 |
Barbara Kingsolver has moved to my list of favorite authors. After reading The Poisonwood Bible, which was a revelation, I acquired several more of her books and was told by friends that I needed to read this one next. I'm so glad I did, because I loved almost everything about this novel, which is so entertaining and educational and thought provoking. As a lifelong bug nut with a fixation on Luna Moths and the ecological web, as well as an obsession with the mountains where the book is set, this would be a great read for me regardless of the strength of the story or skill of the author. Given that it is elegantly and passionately written, skillfully paced and gravid with unforgettable characters, scenes and moments, I am sure to reread this one again, and recommend it to my friends and especially my nature and farming bedeviled family. There is more personal and scientific truth in Prodigal Summer than any book I've read in ages.

I'm holding back on that last half star because I wanted more completion in the story lines, I needed to know what happened to everyone, wanted at least for the book to take me into the first frost, not end so suddenly. ( )
  readaholic12 | May 14, 2013 |
It's a rare thing for me to read a book twice and enjoy it as much the second time around. Kingsolver's Prodigal Summer is that sort of novel--a book in which one can immerse oneself completely. There is, as always with this writer, a subtext of conservation and living lightly upon the earth but she manages to avoid becoming overly "preachy" in this particular work. Essentially, the story is about women and their spirit and courage in meeting the problems life hands them. Weaving through the stories is a discourse on their relationships with the creatures that share the planet with them. One observation there; Kingsolver's female characters always seem essentially the same to me. Their circumstances differ but their "voice" is always so similar that the characters are practically interchangeable. Smart and sweetly, gently obsessed, they are all equally engaging ( )
  turtlesleap | May 6, 2013 |
This was one of the better books I've read in a while (with the exception of Harry Potter, of course). The main characters were very strong, environmentally aware women that I could relate to. Even though there were really three stories going on at once, they were very skilfully interwoven into a wonderful whole. I do recommend this book. ( )
  JG_IntrovertedReader | Apr 3, 2013 |
wow, i love this woman's writing. she makes me think about things and appreciate things that i'm ashamed to say i usually don't think about. (i need to weed my small patch of garden but now i can't go out and buy that weedkiller i was going to, because that'll kill some insects that i have no business killing.) i love what she did in this book, weaving nature with life and living and love. it's powerful and moving and funny and even when it's predictable it's lovely. ( )
  elisa.saphier | Apr 2, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 126 (next | show all)
Readers hoping for the emotional intensity and wide-angle vision of ''The Poisonwood Bible,'' Kingsolver's magnificent 1998 epic about a self-destructing missionary family in the newly independent Congo, will most likely be disappointed. But the legions of fans primed on earlier books like ''Animal Dreams'' and ''The Bean Trees'' will find themselves back on familiar, well-cleared ground of plucky heroines, liberal politics and vivid descriptions of the natural world.
 
In an improbably appealing book with the feeling of a nice stay inside a terrarium, Ms. Kingsolver means to illustrate the nature of biological destiny and provide enlightened discourse on various ecological matters.
 
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--for Steven, Camille, and Lily, and for wildness, where it lives
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Her body moved with the frankness that comes from solitary habits.
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Arguments could fill a marriage like water, running through everything, always, with no taste or color but lots of noise.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0060959037, Paperback)

There is no one in contemporary literature quite like Barbara Kingsolver. Her dialogue sparkles with sassy wit and earthy poetry; her descriptions are rooted in daily life but are also on familiar terms with the eternal. With Prodigal Summer, she returns from the Congo to a "wrinkle on the map that lies between farms and wildness." And there, in an isolated pocket of southern Appalachia, she recounts not one but three intricate stories.

Exuberant, lush, riotous--the summer of the novel is "the season of extravagant procreation" in which bullfrogs carelessly lay their jellied masses of eggs in the grass, "apparently confident that their tadpoles would be able to swim through the lawn like little sperms," and in which a woman may learn to "tell time with her skin." It is also the summer in which a family of coyotes moves into the mountains above Zebulon Valley:

The ghost of a creature long extinct was coming in on silent footprints, returning to the place it had once held in the complex anatomy of this forest like a beating heart returned to its body. This is what she believed she would see, if she watched, at this magical juncture: a restoration.
The "she" is Deanna Wolfe, a wildlife biologist observing the coyotes from her isolated aerie--isolated, that is, until the arrival of a young hunter who makes her even more aware of the truth that humans are only an infinitesimal portion in the ecological balance. This truth forms the axis around which the other two narratives revolve: the story of a city girl, entomologist, and new widow and her efforts to find a place for herself; and the story of Garnett Walker and Nannie Rawley, who seem bent on thrashing out the countless intimate lessons of biology as only an irascible traditional farmer and a devotee of organic agriculture can. As Nannie lectures Garnett, "Everything alive is connected to every other by fine, invisible threads. Things you don't see can help you plenty, and things you try to control will often rear back and bite you, and that's the moral of the story."

Structurally, that gossamer web is the story: images, phrases, and events link the narratives, and these echoes are rarely obvious, always serendipitous. Kingsolver is one of those authors for whom the terrifying elegance of nature is both aesthetic wonder and source of a fierce and abiding moral vision. She may have inherited Thoreau's mantle, but she piles up riches of her own making, blending her extravagant narrative gift with benevolent concise humor. She treads the line between the sentimental and the glorious like nobody else in American literature. --Kelly Flynn

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:42:34 -0500)

(see all 9 descriptions)

Weaves together three stories of human love against the larger tapestry of lives inhabiting the forested mountains and struggling small farms of southern Appalachia. From the author of the much-praised The poisonwood bible.

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