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Crossing Bully Creek (Milkweed National Fiction Prize)Blog this item

Book Description

In Crossing Bully Creek, acclaimed author Margaret Erhart employs an eclectic array of well-drawn characters to chronicle the sometimes torrential swiftness, sometimes trickling slowness of change through generations. At the story's heart is Henry Detroit, owner of Longbrow Plantation — now on his deathbed as the 1960s come to a close. Around him swirl servants, retainers, workers, and family, all gathered to preside over his death, and the death of life, as they know it in the South. The book moves back and forth from the 1920s to the 1960s, revealing each character's story through fragments of memory, conversation, or action, each episode evoking a vision of mists parting on a South that resists nearly all outside influences and efforts to change. From Henry's wife, Rowena, to the servant Rutha, from his saucy granddaughter to the man running the plantation for his son, characters black, white, and in between move toward and through a time when old traditions linger, yet begin to give way — subtly transformed through the small, determined acts of a few individuals.

Book Details
English Books
Hardcover 328 Pages
ISBN-10: 1571310428
ISBN-13: 9781571310422
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Pub date: Mar 10, 2005
Dimensions: 21 cm x 14 cm x 3 cm Just how big is that?
Also available as: Paperback
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