Description
About the Author
Douglas Unger, a professor of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, is also the author of El Yanqui and The Turkey War, and, most recently, Voices from Silence: A Novel of Repression and Terror in Argentina.
Reviews
"This fine first novel courts comparison with Willa Cather's . . . O Pioneers! But there is a big difference, since O Pioneers! . . . is about beginnings, while Leaving the Land is, sadly and disturbingly, about endings. It shows family farming giving way to corporate farming and agribusiness. . . . Marge [Hogan] has character, which is probably not inheritable. It is a rare commodity in modern novels."-New York Times Book Review
"Nothing can now reverse the decline of the way of life Unger describes, but his beautiful and haunting book is at least a worthy monument to it."-[London] Times Literary Supplement
"Douglas Unger's first novel is one of [the] year's best. . . . He's made a powerful debut."-Newsweek
"An unusually mature first novel, as unsentimental as its unlucky heroine, but filled with a sly affection for unwitting victims."-New Yorker
"Leaving the Land will win prizes. Or ought to. It is loving and tough and so honest it makes your teeth rattle. . . . An outstanding book about who we are."-Boston Globe
"A vivid and memorable portrait of a small South Dakota farming community whose colorful folk traditions and way of life are destroyed by corporate agribusiness. The power of the book rests on it realistic characters. . . . Unger's language is spare and clean-his prose often as stark as the land he describes."-San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle
"An affecting, grittily realistic tale that moves to the steady, compelling rhythm of the changing seasons."-Publishers Weekly
Book Information
ISBN 9780803295605
Author Douglas Unger
Format Paperback
Page Count 277
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press
Weight(grams) 312g