The Awakening Land: The Trees, The Fields, & The Town
by Conrad Richter
Awakening Land Trilogy (Collections and Selections — omnibus)
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As a small girl, Sayward Wheeler and her family walk from Pennsylvania to the wilderness of the Ohio valley where they suffer many hardships and witness the rapid development of the area.Tags
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Originally, I intended to read only "The Town" because it was the Pulitzer Fiction winner for 1951, but I discovered it was the third installment of a trilogy, so I decided to read the "set," and I am glad I did. Another reviewer compared The Awakening Land to Laura Ingalls Wilder's "Little House" series, and in a very simple way, it is similar primarily for the "cabin in the woods" setting, particularly in Volume I "The Trees." However, Richter's works go beyond the pioneer spirit which is the central theme of Sayward "Saird" Luckett Wheeler the main character of the three novels. The plot is an engaging weave of history, the "simple life of yesteryear" and the generational changes in family and societal attitudes. In this piece of show more fiction, as I have found in other Pulitzer fiction winners, although the subject matter and writing style may be quaint (or antiquated) basic human (American) attitudes and challenges haven't changed and the lessons to be learned remain the same. show less
I call these "Little House on the Prarie" for grown-ups. I've read the series several times, and always feel as if I'm living back in the days when families traveled west into the American wildnerness to carve out their future. We trek with the family across the Ohio River to settle in the woods. Survival not only means finding food and battling the elements, overcoming the lonliness of the wildnerness. The books document the growth of community told the oldest daughter of the family, who is a child when the first book begins and a century old when they end.
In my opinion, Sayward Luckett Wheeler is one of the great American women characters. She became equal to anything in the difficult time period in which she lived: holding her family together, marrying, having children, building and educating. I have written more about her here:
http://womenandmountains.blogspot.com/search?q=sayward+luckett
http://womenandmountains.blogspot.com/search?q=sayward+luckett
Very good condition. Dust jacket shows minor wear on spine edges. Binding tight. Pages clean. Minor spotting on cover.
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Books Set in Ohio
30 works; 6 members
Author Information

41+ Works 4,725 Members
Conrad Richter was born in Pine Grove, Pennsylvania on October 13, 1890. Richter started a small publishing business and wrote magazine fiction and nonfiction books on scientific philosophy. Conrad Richter won the Pulitzer Prize for his novel, "The Town," in 1951. The book was the third in what became known as Richter's Ohio Trilogy. These books show more were later published in one volume entitled, The Awakening Land: The Trees, The Fields, The Town. The books followed the life of Sayward Luckett Wheeler who was widely considered one of the most sensitively drawn pioneer women in fiction. The trilogy describes her participation in the gradual replacement of the gloomy and dangerous Ohio forest wilderness with new farming communities and a thriving town. Although Richter published more than 20 other novels and collections of short stories, most of which featured pioneers battling their environment, and some of which won their own awards, he is still best known for his Ohio Trilogy. Richter has written many other books including "Early Americana," a collection of short stories, "The Sea of Grass," a book about crooked politicians and cattlemen, and "The Light in the Forest," a book about the kidnapping of a white boy by Native Americans. He also won a National Book Award for "The Waters of Kronos" in 1961. "The Sea of Grass," was also nominated for the National Book Award in 1937. Conrad Richter died in Pottsville, Pennsylvania on October 30, 1968. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Work Relationships
Contains
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1940-03-01 (The Trees) (The Trees); 1946-03-28 (The Fields) (The Fields); 1950-04-24 (The Town) (The Town); 1966-09 (one-volume edition, reset and printed from new plates) (one-volume edition, reset and printed from new plates)
- People/Characters
- Sayward "Saird" Luckett Wheeler; Worth Luckett; Jary Luckett; Achsa Luckett; Wyitt Luckett; Sulie Luckett (show all 10); Genny Luckett; Jake Tench; Louie Scurrah; Portius Wheeler
- Important places
- Ohio Territory, USA; Ohio, USA
- Related movies
- The Awakening Land (1978 | IMDb)
- Epigraph
- Remember the days of old, consider the years of many generations, ask thy father and he will show thee, thy elders, and they will tell thee. ~Deuteronomy 32:7
- First words
- They moved along in the bobbing, springy gait of a family that followed the woods as some families follow the sea.
- Disambiguation notice
- This book is an omnibus of three novels by Conrad Richter (The Trees, The Fields, and The Land), and should not be combined with the individual volumes.
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ3 .R417 — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction in English
Statistics
- Members
- 103
- Popularity
- 314,075
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (4.24)
- Languages
- Dutch, English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 1
- ASINs
- 6





























































