Goodbye, Wisconsin
by Glenway Wescott
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Description
Rural Wisconsin was still a wilderness in these early 1920s stories by Glenway Wescott. The distances between farms and small towns seemed great in those days. So, too, was the struggle of social order and religion against poverty, nature, and a stubborn streak of lawlessness. But the real adventure in these stories is in Wescott's deep understanding of human nature. His characters may be tragic, heroic, comic, or inspiring but, if there is one theme here, it is the search for personal show more freedom. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Reading these remarkably beautiful and moving short stories, it becomes apparent why Wescott's subsequent career, successful as it was in some ways, was such a disappointment to himself and his friends, for surely, these are the stories of a writer of great promise. Those of us who live in the Midwest will also be reminded how very difficult life was even for our grandparent's generation. These stories of small town life in post-pioneer Wisconsin are told with bright, chiselled, even lapidary prose. Wescott's descriptions of nature are especially vivid and sensitive, often, as one might expect, tending to mirror the emotional states of the characters, almost all of whom are in some way cramped and stifled by the stultifying life they show more are forced to live. show less
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- Reviews
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- (4.17)
- Languages
- English
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- Paper
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- ASINs
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