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a ne{o}lit book club Message Board › New Event: February Meetup 2 - Plainsong by Kent Haruf
| Bethany | |
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Announcing a new event for a ne{o}lit book club!
What: February Meetup 2 - Plainsong by Kent Haruf When: Thursday, February 22, 7:00 PM VOLUNTARY fee: USD1.00 per person Where: Click the link below to find out! Event Description: Last month's events were fairly successful in that we offered both an eastside and a westside meetup. We'll do the same this month, and have decided to read two different books as well. While the first meetup is to discuss "Blankets", the second meetup will be to discuss "Plainsong" by Kent Haruf. For those of use who read both, we will discuss both! As always, everyone is welcome, and come even if you haven't finished the book! Hope to see you there! As posted on Amazon.com: Plainsong, according to Kent Haruf's epigraph, is "any simple and unadorned melody or air." It's a perfect description of this lovely, rough-edged book, set on the very edge of the Colorado plains. Tom Guthrie is a high school teacher whose wife can't--or won't--get out of bed; the McPherons are two bachelor brothers who know little about the world beyond their farm gate; Victoria Roubideaux is a pregnant 17-year-old with no place to turn. Their lives parallel each other in much the same way any small-town lives would--until Maggie Jones, another teacher, makes them intersect. Even as she tries to draw Guthrie out of his black cloud, she sends Victoria to live with the two elderly McPheron brothers, who know far more about cattle than about teenage girls. Trying to console her when she think she's hurt her baby, the best lie they can come up with is this: "I knew of a heifer we had one time that was carrying a calf, and she got a length of fencewire down her some way and it never hurt her or the calf." Holt, Colorado, is the kind of small town where everyone knows everyone's business before that business even happens. In a way, that's true of the book, too. There's not a lot of suspense here, plotwise; you can see each narrative twist and turn coming several miles down the pike. What Plainsong has instead is note-perfect dialogue, surrounded by prose that's straightforward yet rich in particulars: "a woman walking a white lapdog on a piece of ribbon," glimpsed from a car window; the boys' mother, her face "as pale as schoolhouse chalk"; the smells of hay and manure, the variations of prairie light. Even the novel's larger questions are sized to a domestic scale. Will Guthrie find love? Will Victoria run away with the father of her baby? Will the McPherons learn to hold a conversation? But in this case, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and Plainsong manages to capture nothing less than an entire world--fencing pliers, calf-pullers, and all. Kent Haruf has a gorgeous ear, and a knack for rendering the simple complex. --Mary Park --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. Learn more here: http://bookclub.meetu... |