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What begins as a small spat over an unlit cigar in a hardware store spirals out of control for Dolf Beller and Bud Bullard. Dolf has come to make good on a promise he made to his wife years ago. Feeling generous, he's finally getting around to stripping the varnish off her dresser to reveal the mahogany within. It's a job he's never done before, and worst of all, the teenager that's supposed to be helping him at the counter begins hassling him for chomping on an unlit cigar. When Bud Jr. show more calls over his father to talk things out, Dolf is about ready for a fight. He just wasn't prepared to have a gun drawn on him by a one of Bud Bullard's relative-who just happened to be there and happened to love impersonating a police officer. Left embarrassed and begging for his life, Dolf goes home and tells a version of his story his pride can live with. He also bars his family from communicating with any of the Bullards. Conflict resolved. Until the next day, when Bud's hardware store goes up in flames and Dolf's car explodes. Unable to see the incidents as unrelated, these two families enter a battle that's as bitter as it is funny. With rich characters dotting every page, this is a Berger classic that can't be put down. show less

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3 reviews
If you've never read Berger's works, start with this one, which I just reread after about twenty years. Still holds up--and better. Berger is so good at dramatizing the internal monologues of small-town losers that you can't believe how good he is and how funny, even when the writing isn't laugh-out-loud. He homes in on their cliches, values, and assumptions so well. A friend of mine just said, "Berger should be and should have been given full Postwar Literary Lion treatment. They're all fading now: Go to the store and the only one who still commands half a shelf or more is Kurt Vonnegut. But Berger should have shone alongside John Updike and more brightly than Philip Roth." Amen. This is Berger at his best.
I thought this book was pretty good. Flowed nicely and was an interesting take on the whole Hatfield and McCoy's feud. Worth a try.
A rough and tumble foray into an earlier time when violence and bigotry reigned supreme. Unsettling in its easy to read narrative. Disconcerting in its portrayal of real America.

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28+ Works 4,323 Members
Thomas Berger was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on July 20, 1924. During World War II, he enlisted in the Army and served in England and Germany as part of the Medical Corps. He received a baccalaureate degree with honors from the University of Cincinnati in 1948 and pursued graduate work in English at Columbia University until 1951. He worked as a show more librarian at the Tamiment Institute and Library in New York and as a summary writer for The New York Times Index. His first novel, Crazy in Berlin, was published in 1958. He wrote numerous books during his lifetime including Killing Time, Who Is Teddy Villanova?, Adventures of the Artificial Woman, Sneaky People, The Houseguest, Meeting Evil, Suspects, Best Friends, and The Feud. Several of his novels were adapted into films including Little Big Man starring Dustin Hoffman and Neighbors starring John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. He died on July 13, 2014 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Marcellino, Fred (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Feud
Original publication date
1983
Important places
Hornbeck; Millville
Related movies
The Feud (1989 | IMDb)
Dedication
To Mick Mooney
First words
One Saturday morning in the middle of October, Dolf Beeler, a burly, beer-bellied foreman at the plant in Millville, but who lived in the neighboring town of Hornbeck, came over to Bud's Hardware in Millville to buy paint rem... (show all)over and steel wool for the purpose of stripping a supposedly solid-walnut dresser to the wood that underlay the many coats of varnish.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Jack suspected he had made a mistake that day in the garage, and he still regretted it, as men do, many years later, though by then he was filing dispatches from the other side of the world.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3552 .E719 .F4Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
183
Popularity
177,075
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.82)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
5