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The classic novel of a small Minnesota town—and of one school teacher who calls it homeThis utterly charming, deeply poignant debut remains perhaps the signature achievement of beloved novelist Jon Hassler—once hailed by The New York Times as “a writer good enough to restore your faith in fiction.” It’s the story of a week in the life of Miles Pruitt, a thirty-five-year-old bachelor who teaches high school English in Staggerford, Minnesota. And though it is only a week, it’s show more an extraordinary week, filled with the poetry of living, the sweetness of expectation, and the glory of surprise that can change a life forever.
Praise for Staggerford
“Witty, intelligent, compassionate . . . an absolutely smashing first novel.”—The Plain Dealer
“You’ll remember it for a long time.”—The Minneapolis Tribune
“One of the year’s truly freshly conceived and carried out novels, one whose not always so gentle ironies address themselves to a broader range of life than is to be found in Staggerford, Minnesota.”—The Kansas City Star
“A thoroughly convincing X-ray vision of small-town life . . . so sincere, so true, so honest with itself, and so very, very funny that a reader often has to wipe the tears out of the corners of his eyes before he can—as he must—read on.”—The Houston Post
“Very entertaining . . . [Miles is] one of the most likable protagonists of modern fiction.”—The Pittsburgh Press
“Staggerford, Minnesota, is a town out of control. It is as weird and convoluted as any lover of comic fiction could wish.”—Boston Herald American. Literature. Fiction. Romance. show less
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bunnygirl Both are about secondary schools in small towns; their protagonists are somewhat outcast from the school staff, and the staff is largely made up of ineffectual, flawed characters who derive enjoyment from playing mind games with the other teachers.
Member Reviews
English teacher Miles Pruitt is having a tough week. The high school principal will not get off his back, he has a bad toothache, and one of his pupils, a teenage girl, cry out for help in her messed up life. And he doesn’t know what to do about it, fearing rumours of a relationship with her.
On top of that there’s a fight in the classroom, a Chippewa student is being hurt, which upsets the whole community in a nearby Indian reservation. Pruitt is in the middle of an uprising.
[Staggerford] is the first in a series of novels that takes place in the fictional rural Minnesota town. It is populated with interesting and eccentric characters. There are many funny scenes and conversations. Specially Agatha McGee, a devout Catholic and show more strict school teacher with a good heart - she is a wonderful spirited character.
This was four stars until the sudden and tragic ending of the novel. I didn’t see that coming and didn’t feel it was in line with the otherwise “feel-good” and warmhearted mood of the novel. And some of the story-lines I felt were a little unresolved.
But it hasn’t deterred me from wanting more of Staggerford and John Hassler. [Simon’s Night] was much better, and I look forward to some more life wisdom from dear Agatha McGee who returns in some of the other Staggerford-novels. show less
On top of that there’s a fight in the classroom, a Chippewa student is being hurt, which upsets the whole community in a nearby Indian reservation. Pruitt is in the middle of an uprising.
[Staggerford] is the first in a series of novels that takes place in the fictional rural Minnesota town. It is populated with interesting and eccentric characters. There are many funny scenes and conversations. Specially Agatha McGee, a devout Catholic and show more strict school teacher with a good heart - she is a wonderful spirited character.
This was four stars until the sudden and tragic ending of the novel. I didn’t see that coming and didn’t feel it was in line with the otherwise “feel-good” and warmhearted mood of the novel. And some of the story-lines I felt were a little unresolved.
But it hasn’t deterred me from wanting more of Staggerford and John Hassler. [Simon’s Night] was much better, and I look forward to some more life wisdom from dear Agatha McGee who returns in some of the other Staggerford-novels. show less
My description of this novel: A week in the life of small-town high school teacher Miles Pruitt. There wasn't a fast moving plot. In fact, I'd have trouble explaining what the plot actually was. The only thing that seemed to push this novel forward was time itself.
I enjoyed it immensely, right up until the ending. I thought about it for a couple of days but am unable to convince myself that this ending isn't out of place or that it has a larger worthwhile point.
Yet, like I said, I really liked this book. I enjoyed my time with Miles Pruitt, the high school where he taught, the inept superintendent, the nervous principal. My favorite character was Miss McGee, Miles' Catholic boarder, who once set off a fire alarm at school to prevent show more students from hearing any more nonsense from a modern poet.
She prays for Miles (Hail Marys for the return of his faith), and she dislikes rain. She wonders about sin after observing that ferns thrive only with sun AND rain. "Does God permit sin because it's an ingredient in something he's concocting and we human beings aren't aware of what it is? Is there sprouting up somewhere a beautiful fern, as it were, composed of goodness and sin?"
She later rejects her own thinking. When I think about this novel, I expect that I'll remember Miss McGee and Miles Pruitt with equal fondness. show less
I enjoyed it immensely, right up until the ending. I thought about it for a couple of days but am unable to convince myself that this ending isn't out of place or that it has a larger worthwhile point.
Yet, like I said, I really liked this book. I enjoyed my time with Miles Pruitt, the high school where he taught, the inept superintendent, the nervous principal. My favorite character was Miss McGee, Miles' Catholic boarder, who once set off a fire alarm at school to prevent show more students from hearing any more nonsense from a modern poet.
She prays for Miles (Hail Marys for the return of his faith), and she dislikes rain. She wonders about sin after observing that ferns thrive only with sun AND rain. "Does God permit sin because it's an ingredient in something he's concocting and we human beings aren't aware of what it is? Is there sprouting up somewhere a beautiful fern, as it were, composed of goodness and sin?"
She later rejects her own thinking. When I think about this novel, I expect that I'll remember Miss McGee and Miles Pruitt with equal fondness. show less
Not a lot happens in this book about a small town in the Midwest in the 1970’s. At least, not until the last quarter of the book. Then things start to rush along, each event becoming more serious as we go.
This is a character-driven story, and I found the characters to be fully developed and interesting. There’s a lot of humor here as well, most of it subtly subverting the mores of the 70’s. It’s certainly something different from most novels. Highly recommended to those who enjoy something out of the ordinary, and don’t mind a quiet read.
This is a character-driven story, and I found the characters to be fully developed and interesting. There’s a lot of humor here as well, most of it subtly subverting the mores of the 70’s. It’s certainly something different from most novels. Highly recommended to those who enjoy something out of the ordinary, and don’t mind a quiet read.
This is a wonderful novel and received glowing reviews when it was first published. Indeed, it was named Novel of the Year in 1978 by the Friends of American Writers.
It tells the story of one remarkable week in the life of a high school English teacher in a small town in Minnesota. If the premise sounds thin, readers have found the story compelling. I'd rather not spoil the plot, so I will only say that this is a sort of wry murder mystery.
If you enjoy Staggerford, Hassler has written ten other novels and sundry other books including adolescent novels, short stories, and a writing memoir. One of the characters Jon introduces in Staggerford (the Catholic school teacher Agatha McGee) becomes a central character in several of his other show more novels. A Green Journey is the best known of the "Agatha novels," but its sequel, Dear james may be the better book. show less
It tells the story of one remarkable week in the life of a high school English teacher in a small town in Minnesota. If the premise sounds thin, readers have found the story compelling. I'd rather not spoil the plot, so I will only say that this is a sort of wry murder mystery.
If you enjoy Staggerford, Hassler has written ten other novels and sundry other books including adolescent novels, short stories, and a writing memoir. One of the characters Jon introduces in Staggerford (the Catholic school teacher Agatha McGee) becomes a central character in several of his other show more novels. A Green Journey is the best known of the "Agatha novels," but its sequel, Dear james may be the better book. show less
I am a big fan of Jon Hassler and was saddened when I heard of his passing. A number of his books revolve around the small town of Staggerford in the Midwest. Having grown up in a small town in Minnesota, it was easy to identify with and recognize the characters and situations in these books -- His writing style is not unlike that of Alexander McCall Smith in his Isabel Dalhousie series. If you enjoy reading books that take you to simpler, calmer place that still holds your interest, Staggerford and Hassler's other books are a great place to begin...
Miles is not your average teacher. And if he is, you get to wondering about what teachers are like outside of school and how their personal lives are. He is the main protagonist and "thinks" he is falling in love with one of his eighteen year old students. I liked this book because it takes place in a real town in Minnesota (the state in which I reside) and it references places in Duluth where I have been. I was forced to read it for school, but in the end it turned out to be not so bad, and I enjoyed it. I recommend this to anyone who likes a good ole realistic novel.
2869 Staggerford, by Jon Hassler (read 15 May 1996) This is Hassler's first novel, published in 1974. It is easy and fun to read, full of interesting characters. There is much humor and pathos. There are tour-letter vulgarisms (but not obscenities) but one does not mind them too much. I was disappointed by the ending, but till then I really liked the book (and have gone to read most of Hassler's subsequent work).
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Author Jon Hassler was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on March 30, 1933. He received his bachelor's degree from St. John's University in 1955 before going on to the University of North Dakota for his master's degree. After graduating from college, he taught high school English for the next 10 years. In 1970, while teaching at Brainerd Community show more College, he became interested in writing fictional stories. Hassler's first novel, Staggerford, a story of a small-town school teacher, was chosen Novel of the Year in 1978 by the Friends of American Writers. In 1987, Hassler's fifth novel, Grand Opening, a tale told from the point of view of a twelve-year-old boy living in the corrupt town of Plainview, Minnesota, won the Best Fiction Award, given by the Society of Midland Authors. Granted honorary Doctor of Letters degrees by Assumption College, the University of North Dakota, and the University of Notre Dame, he has also received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and the Minnesota State Arts Board. He died, after years of suffering from progressive supranuclear palsy, on March 20, 2008. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Is abridged in
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Staggerford
- Original publication date
- 1977
- People/Characters
- Agatha McGee
- Important places
- Minnesota, Verenigde Staten; Staggerford, Minnesota, USA
- Epigraph
- Oh, why is it that life is for some an exquisite privilege and others must pay for their seats at the play with a ransom of cholers, infections and nightmares?
- Dedication
- For my mother and father
God bless them - First words
- First hour, Miles yawned.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)After school he went home and put his arms around the heavy softness of Mrs. Stevenson's middle and lifted her, astounded, three inches off the floor.
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- Reviews
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- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
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