
George Sessions Perry (1910–1956)
Author of Hold Autumn in Your Hand
About the Author
Works by George Sessions Perry
The story of Texas 4 copies
Thirty Days Hath September 1 copy
Associated Works
The New Yorker Book of War Pieces: London, 1939 to Hiroshima, 1945 (1947) — Contributor — 113 copies, 2 reviews
100 Best True Stories of World War II (WW2) (with 32 illustrations) (2011) — Contributor — 36 copies
Furrow's End: An Anthology of Great Farm Stories — Contributor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1910-05-05
- Date of death
- 1956-12-13
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- Saturday Evening Post
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Rockdale, Texas, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Texas, USA
Members
Reviews
Big thanks to Howard (again) for alerting me to this book. You should read his wonderful review before you read this.
Hold Autunm in Your Hand is a year in the life of Sam Tucker as he struggles to support his family (wife, two children and grandmother) during the Great Depression. Tired of being a share cropper he takes over a sixty- eight farm in the San Pedro bottomland and works for six bits a day. Despite multiple setbacks Sam is always wonderfully optimistic and stoic. It’s his show more perspicacity that get him through.
“You somehow had the feeling, when with simple, laborious magic you were making good things out of dirt and time and weather, that you were paying your dues in that big association know as the human race“
Even when his toddler son is gravely ill with malnutrition Sam cheerfully finds a way (he borrows a cow for milk and spends his final pennies on old, but green vegetables).
He understands both the price of everything and the value of everything. The chapter where he makes syrup (to earn a little extra income) for Tiff Mosley is just tremendous. The book is full of wonderful characters, none more so than his Granny, who is a comical termagant. She is memorable for all the wrong reasons and a fantastic character .
George Sessions Perry wasn’t from the country, but spent time living with farmers during the Great Depression to help him write this book. He clearly saw the best in people and admired their resilience and their ability to survive. It’s a sympathetic and honest account. Hold Autumn in Your Hand won the National Book Award.
The author’s life took a downturn shortly after the book was finished, and tragically he never fully recovered.
I was genuinely sad at the end of the book because I’d really enjoyed sharing a year in the life of Sam Tucker, who became one of my favourite literary characters.
On the first page of my copy was a handwritten message, in copperplate:
“Jackie from Anne
1943
Send from the USA to my dear cousin”.
I don’t know who Jackie was, but I really hope that she enjoyed Hold Autumn in Your Hand as much as I did, nearly 80 years later. show less
Hold Autunm in Your Hand is a year in the life of Sam Tucker as he struggles to support his family (wife, two children and grandmother) during the Great Depression. Tired of being a share cropper he takes over a sixty- eight farm in the San Pedro bottomland and works for six bits a day. Despite multiple setbacks Sam is always wonderfully optimistic and stoic. It’s his show more perspicacity that get him through.
“You somehow had the feeling, when with simple, laborious magic you were making good things out of dirt and time and weather, that you were paying your dues in that big association know as the human race“
Even when his toddler son is gravely ill with malnutrition Sam cheerfully finds a way (he borrows a cow for milk and spends his final pennies on old, but green vegetables).
He understands both the price of everything and the value of everything. The chapter where he makes syrup (to earn a little extra income) for Tiff Mosley is just tremendous. The book is full of wonderful characters, none more so than his Granny, who is a comical termagant. She is memorable for all the wrong reasons and a fantastic character .
George Sessions Perry wasn’t from the country, but spent time living with farmers during the Great Depression to help him write this book. He clearly saw the best in people and admired their resilience and their ability to survive. It’s a sympathetic and honest account. Hold Autumn in Your Hand won the National Book Award.
The author’s life took a downturn shortly after the book was finished, and tragically he never fully recovered.
I was genuinely sad at the end of the book because I’d really enjoyed sharing a year in the life of Sam Tucker, who became one of my favourite literary characters.
On the first page of my copy was a handwritten message, in copperplate:
“Jackie from Anne
1943
Send from the USA to my dear cousin”.
I don’t know who Jackie was, but I really hope that she enjoyed Hold Autumn in Your Hand as much as I did, nearly 80 years later. show less
This was an unexpected treat! George Sessions Perry tells the story of a year in the life of poor texan farmhand, Sam Tucker who is uneducated, married with 2 children along with "granny", his grandmother he travels from farm to farm picking cotton, working the land many times along side the negroes. Although unschooled, he has an incredible ability to look at a situation and figure out a solution. Never giving up, knowing he's poor, but feeling blessed so easily by the smallest of things. show more Bartering his labor for goods, shelter, money, water,... whatever. He has a positive friendly attitude. Everyone likes him except his neighbor Henry Devers who is constantly trying to sabotage his efforts. The day finally comes when Sam can't hold his outrage at the newest act Devers pulls in destroying his garden and therefore affecting his family's health & life. His positve attitude with "when there's a will there's a way" mentality serves him well and is an inspiring story. "Hold Autumn in your hand" is the knowledge his whole family receives from sending young Daisey to school. Definitely a thumbs up recommendation!
(My cover differs from any listed here so I will have to upload my personal copy of the cover for my edition.) show less
(My cover differs from any listed here so I will have to upload my personal copy of the cover for my edition.) show less
Published in 1944, this is the story of the U.S.S. Marblehead. A ship which was nearly, but not quite, sunk in the Pacific arena of WWII at the beginning of the war. It is the story of how against all odds, the ship was able to make it to safe harbor after an odyssey voyage of more than 9000 miles through waters full of enemy ships, submarines and air patrols.
Written in an upbeat patriotic style (published in 1944), this manages to be a very human tale. The wonderful illustrations throughout show more by John J. Floherty help to personalize the men, but the writers have done a fantastic job of writing about many technical details in words which a layman such as myself can understand. They made the story personal without sinking to the level of maudlin. I couldn't put the book down once the action began and ended up finishing it in one day.
It ties in with [The Story of Doctor Wassell], in that these are some of the sailors he was trying to save in Java.
I loved reading the bulletins posted for each local the ship landed at. They informed about the currency exchange, the entertainments available and those which were against the law as well as reminding sailors that they were guests and representing their country and had better do so accordingly. show less
Written in an upbeat patriotic style (published in 1944), this manages to be a very human tale. The wonderful illustrations throughout show more by John J. Floherty help to personalize the men, but the writers have done a fantastic job of writing about many technical details in words which a layman such as myself can understand. They made the story personal without sinking to the level of maudlin. I couldn't put the book down once the action began and ended up finishing it in one day.
It ties in with [The Story of Doctor Wassell], in that these are some of the sailors he was trying to save in Java.
I loved reading the bulletins posted for each local the ship landed at. They informed about the currency exchange, the entertainments available and those which were against the law as well as reminding sailors that they were guests and representing their country and had better do so accordingly. show less
An excellent rendition of the trials and tribulations of this old, poorly armed ship in. the early days of WW2. The crew was gallant but the enemy was overwhelming. Fortunately, the struggle to get the ship and crew back to the US was successful.
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 18
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 185
- Popularity
- #117,259
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 13
- Favorited
- 1
















