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The Country

A Novel

David Plante, M. D. Mary Gordon

$29.99

Paperback

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English
Beacon Press
08 December 2004
First published in 1981 to wide acclaim, a haunting family novel by'a daringly skillful writer.' (Philip Roth)

Foreword by Mary Gordon

First published in 1981 to wide acclaim, The Countryfollows the last visits of a son, Daniel Francoeur, to his parents' home before the death of his father. Wanting to understand this enigmatic man, Daniel seeks insight through the particulars of his father's life-handling his father's tools and tending to his father's feeble body. Through this contact, his father's mysteries are revealed- his Native-American heritage, his lifelong work as a toolmaker, and his deep and conflicted relationships with his invalid wife and his seven sons.

Written quietly, with great force, The Country illuminates the ties of family, the relationships between fathers and sons, and the love that is often hidden, but ever present.
By:  
Foreword by:  
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 215mm,  Width: 138mm,  Spine: 10mm
Weight:   181g
ISBN:   9780807083796
ISBN 10:   0807083798
Pages:   168
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

David Plante is the author of more than a dozen novels, including the Francoeur trilogy-The Family, The Woods, and The Country-as well as a work of nonfiction, Difficult Women- A Memoir of Three. His work has appeared in many periodicals, The New Yorker and The Paris Review among them, and has been nominated for a National Book Award. He teaches writing at Columbia University and lives in New York and London.

Reviews for The Country: A Novel

There is grief and pain in The Country, and it is not the elegiac kind, but the haunting one . . . and it helps [Mr. Plante] to make, out of his own understanding, a book that belies its slenderness. A great reckoning in a little room.--Bernard Levin, Sunday Times (London) ""The Country is a haunting lament, a controlled cry of loss and knowledge won through language, sorrow, memory, impossible and comprehending love, love learned through childhood in the body of the family, the country.""--Mary Gordon, New York Times Book Review ""Mr. Plante's understanding of the complicated, often perverse configurations that familial relationships can form remains unerring. By mapping out the ways in which beliefs, resentments and hopes are handed down, generation to generation, the ways in which love can mutate into hatred, neediness into rebellion, he creates a portrait of a family that is as uncompromising as it is moving."" --Michiko Kakutani, New York Times Book Review ""Plante has created one of the most harrowing of contemporary novels."" --Philip Roth


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