The Morning Watch
by James Agee
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The Morning Watch by James Agee, like his A Death in the Family, which won him the Pulitzer Prize, is autobiographical. It describes the experiences of twelve-year-old Richard during the early hours of Good Friday and the early stages of spring, in a church school in the Tennessee mountains.Tags
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Si rimane colpiti dalla straordinaria sensibilità di Agee - anche se questa sensibilità generata dai pensieri di un dodicenne sembra posticcia - nonche' dalla evidenza dell'enorme danno psicologico, morale e fisco che la credenza nel cristianesimo può indurre in un ragazzino. Un racconto sull'orrore del venerdì santo e sul passaggio visionario dalla pubertà ad una adolescenza conquistata a fatica. Molto simbolico, altrettanto lirico, assai poetico, lievemente ermetico.
Twelve-year-old Richard is a student at a Catholic boarding school in the mountains of Tennessee. The night before Good Friday, the students and clergy take turns staying awake all night in the cathedral and praying. During his turn at the vigil, Richard spends the whole time reflecting on how closely he matches the ideal of the perfect Catholic. No matter how hard he tries, he always finds himself committing new sins. After his shift is over, he and two friends decide not to go back to bed, as they have been told to do by one of the priests, but instead go to a nearby swimming hole. There, the boys see a snake that has just shed its skin, and they kill it. Richard reflects on the experience on the way back to school to face his show more punishment, and the reader is left to reflect on the nature of spirituality and the general battle of good vs. evil.
There is a lot packed in to this short novel. I really liked all the symbolism and spiritual debates, but there were also times when Richard’s inner dialogue just ran on too long. This is not a book for people who like action, as the bulk of the novel consists of Richard’s thoughts as he kneels in prayer. I liked Agee’s other novel, A Death in the Family, better than this one, although they’re both good. show less
There is a lot packed in to this short novel. I really liked all the symbolism and spiritual debates, but there were also times when Richard’s inner dialogue just ran on too long. This is not a book for people who like action, as the bulk of the novel consists of Richard’s thoughts as he kneels in prayer. I liked Agee’s other novel, A Death in the Family, better than this one, although they’re both good. show less
A young boy is in boarding school, struggling with his religious (Catholic) identity, trying to fit in with the other boys. There were some really interesting parts dealing with ritual and dogma. Highly recommended.
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National Book Award Finalists - Fiction
377 works; 12 members
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42+ Works 7,927 Members
Born in Knoxville, Tennessee, on November 27, 1909 and educated at Harvard, James Agee crowded versatile literary activity into his short and troubled life. In addition to two novels, he wrote short stories, essays, poetry, and screenplays; he worked professionally as a journalist and film critic. Appropriately, he is best remembered for a work show more that combines several genres and literary approaches. Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, a documentary report on sharecropper life accompanied by vividly realistic photographs by Walker Evans, has been called "a great Moby Dick of a book" (New York Times Book Review). It may be considered an important precursor of the so-called nonfiction novel that was to gain prominence during the 1960s. The Morning Watch (1954), a novel in the tradition of portraits of artists-to-be, and A Death in the Family, a moving account of domestic life based on the loss of Agee's father belong to more conventional types of fiction. The 1960 dramatization of All the Way Home by Tad Mosel, won a Pulitizer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award; it was also cited by Life as the "Best American Play of the Season." Agee's work for the screen included his scripts for The African Queen and The Night of the Hunter. Agee on Film (1958-60) consists of a gathering of reviews and comments as well as five scripts. Prior to Laurence Bergreen's well-received 1984 biography of Agee, the principal source of information about his life was Letters of James Agee to Father Flye, a collection of seventy letters written by Agee to his instructor at St. Andrew's School and trusted friend throughout his life. The letters show Agee most often in a reflective, self-condemning mood. The final letters, written from the hospital where he was battling daily heart attacks, are touching, as are his sad reflections on the work he yet wanted to do. Agee died in New York of a heart attack on May 16, 1955. He was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1957 for A Death in the Family. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Die Morgenwache : Roman
- Original title
- The morning watch
- Original publication date
- 1950
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
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- (3.70)
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- English, French, German, Italian
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- ISBNs
- 10
- ASINs
- 9




























































