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That Old Ace in the Hole : A Novel by E. Annie Proulx
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That Old Ace in the Hole : A Novel

by Annie Proulx

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864154,861 (3.67)17
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Scribner (2002), Hardcover, 384 pages

Member:BeckyJG
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Tags:fiction
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English (13)  Swedish (1)  French (1)  All languages (15)
Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
Lots of very colorful characters, but not enough plot. ( )
  sunqueen | Oct 7, 2009 |
A hoot. I mean it in a good way. ( )
  sonyau | Jul 14, 2009 |
Assez exceptionnel comme écriture. Le Texas profond comme si vous y étiez (pas que ça donne envie d'y aller). ( )
  natazouf | Mar 9, 2009 |
I've been trying to read That Old Ace in the Hole : A Novel, but I'm going to give it up. Annie Proulx has built an impressive encyclopedia of individuals of the Oklahoma panhandle, each with their own life history and quirky personality, but I'm hungry for a plot, something to tie them all together and keep me turning the pages. I'm halfway through and still haven't found a plot, so I'm going to give it up unless one of you, dear readers, presents a compelling reason to keep going.
1 vote chndlrs | Sep 6, 2008 |
10.0
  Listener42 | Sep 1, 2008 |
Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
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Dedication
This book is for Jon and Gail
Muffy and Geoff
Morgan
Gillis
and for
Doug and Cathy
with the hope that all their chickens
will be prairie chickens
First words
In late March Bob Dollar, a young, curly-headed man of twenty-five with the broad face of a cat, pale innocent eyes fringed with sooty lashes, drove east along Texas State Highway 15 in the panhandle, down from Denver the day before, over the Raton Pass and through the dead volcano country of northeast New Mexico to the Oklahoma pistol barrel, then a wrong turn north and wasted hours before he regained the way.
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Annie Proulx

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0743242483, Paperback)

Bob Dollar is a reluctant land swindler. When the 25-year-old protagonist in Annie Proulx's That Old Ace in the Hole signs on as a location scout for Global Pork Rind, an industrial hog farming corporation, he has no idea what kind of moral quandaries he's in for. Well, maybe he does. His assignment, after all, is to infiltrate a tiny town in the Texas Panhandle and find a tract of land his employer can turn into an industrial hog farm. Bob tells the locals he's scouting for luxury home developers ("They feel there is potential here"), but as a cover story it's less than clever. Only a fool would build mansions in the godforsaken Panhandle country, a place of light soil, bad wind, killing drought, and end-of-world thunder. "To live here," one Panhandler tells Bob, "it sure helps if you are half cow and half mesquite and all crazy." The narrative follows Bob's hapless quest to ink a deal, but Proulx's mission is bigger than that. She's out to tell the story of the Panhandle itself, to write an entirely new literary territory into existence. With the help of a menagerie of eccentric characters set down in "the most complicated part of North America," Proulx succeeds admirably. --Claire Dederer

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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