Description
|
Biographical Note: KENT HARUF is the author of five previous novels (and, with the photographer Peter Brown, West of Last Chance). His honors include a Whiting Foundation Writers' Award, the Mountains & Plains Booksellers Award, the Wallace Stegner Award, and a special citation from the PEN/Hemingway Foundation; he was also a finalist for the National Book Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and the New Yorker Book Award. He died in November 2014, at the age of seventy-one. Review Quotes: A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The Boston Globe, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and The Denver Post "More Winesburg that Mayberry, Holt and its residents are shaped by physical solitude and emotional reticence. . . . Haruf's fiction ratifies ordinary, nonflashy decency, but he also knows that even the most placid lives are more complicated than they appear from the outside. . . . The novel is a plainspoken, vernacular farewell." --Catherine Holmes, The Charleston Post and Courier "A marvelous addition to his oeuvre. . . . spare but eloquent, bittersweet yet hopeful." --Kurt Rabin, The Fredericksburg Freelance-Star "Lateness--and second chances--have always been a theme for Haruf. But here, in a book about love and the aftermath of grief, in his final hours, he has produced his most intense expression of that yet. . . . Packed into less than 200 pages are all the issues late life provokes." --John Freeman, The Boston Globe "A fitting close to a storied career, a beautiful rumination on aging, accommodation, and our need to connect. . . . As a meditation on life and forthcoming death, Haruf couldn't have done any better. He has given us a powerful, pared-down story of two characters who refuse to go gentle into that good night." --Lynn Rosen, The Philadelphia Enquirer "A delicate, sneakily devastating evocation of place and character. . . . Haruf's story accumulates resonance through carefully chosen details; the novel is quiet but never complacent." -- The New Yorker "Elegiac, mournful and compassionate. . .a triumphant end to an inspiring literary career [and] a reminder of a loss on the American cultural landscape, as well as a parting gift from a master storyteller." --William J. Cobb, The Dallas Morning News "A fine and poignant novel that demonstrates that our desire to love and to be loved does not dissolve with age. . . . The story speeds along, almost as if it's a page-turning mystery." --Joseph Peschel, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch "By turns amusing and sad, skipping-down-the-sidewalk light and pensive. . . . I recommend reading it straight through, then sitting in quiet reflection of beautiful literary art." --Fred Ohles, The Lincoln Journal Star "Haruf is never sentimental, and the ending--multiple twists packed into the last twenty pages--is gritty, painful and utterly human. . . . His novels are imbued with an affection and understanding that transform the most mundane details into poetry. Like the friendly light shining from Addie's window, Haruf's final novel is a beacon of hope; he is sorely missed." --Francesca Wade, Financial Times "Haruf was knows as a great writer and teacher whose work will endure. . . . The cadence of this book is soft and gentle, filled with shy emotion, as tentative as a young person's first kiss--timeless in its beauty. . . . Addie and Louis find a type of love that, as our society ages, ever more people in the baby boom generation may find is the only kind of love that matters." --Jim Ewing, The Jackson Clarion-Ledger "There is so much wisdom in this beautifully pared-back and gentle book. . . a small, quiet gem, written in English so plain that it sparkles." --Anne Susskind, The Sydney Morning Herald "His great subject was the struggle of decency against small-mindedness, and his rare gift was to make sheer decency a moving subject. . . . [This] novel runs on the dogged insistence that simple elements carry depths, and readers will find much to be grateful for." --Joan Silber, The New York Times Book Review "In a fitting and gorgeous end to a body of work that prizes resilience above all else, Haruf has bequeathed readers a map charting a future that is neither easy nor painless, but it's also not something we have to bear alone." -- Esquire "Utterly charming [and] distilled to elemental purity. . . . such a tender, carefully polished work that it seems like a blessing we had no right to expect." --Ron Charles, The Washington Post "Haruf spent a life making art from our blind collisions, and Our Souls at Night is a fitting finish." --John Reimringer, The Minneapolis Star Tribune "Haruf once again banishes doubts. Our souls can surprise us. Beneath the surface of reticent lives--and of Haruf's calm prose--they prove unexpectedly brave." --Ann Hulbert, The Atlantic "Blunt, textured, and dryly humorous. . . this quietly elegiac novel caps a fine, late-blooming and tenacious writing career. . . . Haruf's gift is to make hay of the unexpected, and it feels like a mercy. . . . This is a novel for just after sunset on a summer's eve, when the sky is still light and there is much to see, if you are looking." --Wingate Packard, The Seattle Times "A parting gift [and] a reminder of how profoundly we will miss Holt and its people, and Kent Haruf's extraordinary writing." --Sandra Dallas, The Denver Post "Short, spare and moving... Our Souls at Night is already creating a stir." --Jennifer Maloney, The Wall Street Journal Review Citations:
|
Author: Haruf, Kent
Publisher: Vintage
Binding: Paperback
Pub Date: 2016-06-28
BISAC: Fiction / Literary|Fiction / Family Life / General|Fiction / Romance / General
Subjects: Grandparent and child|Widowers|Loneliness|Memory|Colorado|FICTION / Family Life|FICTION / Romance / General|Domestic fiction|Love stories|FICTION / Literary
Weight: 0.45 lbs
ISBN: 9781101911921
ASIN: -
SKU: SP-9781101911921
