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My Ántonia by Willa Cather
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My Antonia (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (B&N Classics Hardcover)

by Willa Cather

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5,05172396 (3.94)206
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Barnes & Noble Classics (2005), Hardcover, 272 pages

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English (71)  Italian (1)  All languages (72)
Showing 1-5 of 71 (next | show all)
I was given My Ántonia as an AP American Lit summer reading assignment in high school. It took me most of the summer to plow my way through it, including the duration of two cross-country flights. Seven years later, I can barely remember what it's about, much less any details. Perhaps I should read it again, but the memory of my torturous first attempt keeps dissuading me. ( )
  rivetkitten | Dec 27, 2009 |
Very good. Reminds me a bit of Land's End (Provincetown) - plain landscape described in a way that emphasises the grandeur.
  wandering_star | Dec 20, 2009 |
Cather's writing bring Nebraska, the Burden family, and their friends vividly to life.
  carladp | Dec 16, 2009 |
I loved this book. It was well written. It had me gripped.

I loved that it portrayed the many different aspects of pioneer life. The hypocrisies, the joys and a the sorrows. I also liked that it was told from the perspective of a man who knew these women. It gave an impression of the women that I had not expected. One can tell that the author is female but I find it interesting that she uses a male to tell her story. I wonder if a man at the time would have seen and commented on the things that the narrator commented on?

I liked that the story followed several different women and showed them as independent characters, capable of taking care of themselves. The girls are all strong and learn to use their strengths to help themselves but also each other, despite what society around them might think.

One aspect that I found very relevant both for the time when the story was written and set and for today was the hypocrisies surrounding men and women and their roles. At the same time as the girls were capable of hard work and industry was admired a girl who worked at a “mans job” was seen as somehow less of a woman. She was looked down upon and talked about. I still find these attitudes today. The women themselves were doing it to survive and to help their families survive something that was required but they were seen as less than the women who lived in town.

Another significant aspect of which I had not thought about was the attitude of the Americans towards the newly arrived immigrants. The immigrants worked hard and were motivated but were often seen as having looser morals and differing attitudes. Lets be honest and say that this attitude still prevails in many societies today (my own included). It is an attitude I find sad. ( )
  Zommbie1 | Dec 12, 2009 |
It was, for a classic book, perhaps the most interesting of them I have read. Unlike the others it kept me so entertained. I love her writing and this book. The story is great and I can picture the place. I love it. ( )
  14hermannsc | Oct 5, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 71 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
Optima dies . . . prima fugit
-Virgil
Dedication
To Carrie and Irene Miner in memory of affections old and true.
First words
I first heard of Ántonia on what seemed to me an interminable journey across the great midland plain of North America.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Wikipedia in English (3)

Barnes & Noble Classics Collection

My Ántonia

World's Best Reading

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 039575514X, Paperback)

It seems almost sacrilege to infringe upon a book as soulful and rich as Willa Cather's My Ántonia by offering comment. First published in 1918, and set in Nebraska in the late 19th century, this tale of the spirited daughter of a Bohemian immigrant family planning to farm on the untamed land ("not a country at all but the material out of which countries are made") comes to us through the romantic eyes of Jim Burden. He is, at the time of their meeting, newly orphaned and arriving at his grandparents' neighboring farm on the same night her family strikes out to make good in their new country. Jim chooses the opening words of his recollections deliberately: "I first heard of Ántonia on what seemed to be an interminable journey across the great midland plain of North America," and it seems almost certain that readers of Cather's masterpiece will just as easily pinpoint the first time they heard of Ántonia and her world. It seems equally certain that they, too, will remember that moment as one of great light in an otherwise unremarkable trip through the world.

Ántonia, who, even as a grown woman somewhat downtrodden by circumstance and hard work, "had not lost the fire of life," lies at the center of almost every human condition that Cather's novel effortlessly untangles. She represents immigrant struggles with a foreign land and tongue, the restraints on women of the time (with which Cather was very much concerned), the more general desires for love, family, and companionship, and the great capacity for forbearance that marked the earliest settlers on the frontier.

As if all this humanity weren't enough, Cather paints her descriptions of the vastness of nature--the high, red grass, the road that "ran about like a wild thing," the endless wind on the plains--with strokes so vivid as to make us feel in our bones that we've just come in from a walk on that very terrain ourselves. As the story progresses, Jim goes off to the University in Lincoln to study Latin (later moving on to Harvard and eventually staying put on the East Coast in another neat encompassing of a stage in America's development) and learns Virgil's phrase "Optima dies ... prima fugit" that Cather uses as the novel's epigraph. "The best days are the first to flee"--this could be said equally of childhood and the earliest hours of this country in which the open land, much like My Ántonia, was nothing short of a rhapsody in prairie sky blue. --Melanie Rehak

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

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