The Great Meadow
By (Author) Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Hesperus Press Ltd
Hesperus Press Ltd
28th September 2012
28th September 2012
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.52
Paperback
200
Width 123mm, Height 195mm, Spine 15mm
245g
First published in 1930 and shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize, The Great Meadow is a historical novel set in the early days of Kentucky settlement. Intertwined with a flowing romantic saga of young love on the Kentucky trail, are richly painted scenes colonial America. Diony Hall has waited for many years for her betrothed to return to marry her. Trying to fathom the nature of identity and her place in the vast newly created America, Diony spends her time at the family hearthside, combining her love of reading with her roles within the family circle and the daily tasks on the homestead. When Berk Jarvis returns and they are married, they both bid farewell to Virginia, family, community and security to head out to found a new family and a new life together in the wilderness of Kentucky What follows is a breathtaking story of love and death, as the settlers cross the Appalachian mountains and struggle to carve a new life on the unforgiving frontier at the mercy of shortages, harsh winters and the perpetual danger of Indian attack. This astonishing novel, with its rhythmic prose, has too long been forgotten.
Praise for Elizabeth Madox Roberts: 'Elizabeth Madox Roberts was that rare thing, a true artist' Robert Penn Warren, author of Pulitzer Prize winning All the King's Men 'Lucid and arresting, rhythmical, fresh in phrasing and construction, giving always the effect of effortless arrangement' New York Times
Born in 1881, and with writing comparable to Willa Cather, William Falkner, Robert Penn Warren, Elizabeth Madox Roberts also possesses a vital link to succeeding generations of female authors such as Kate Chopin and Toni Morrison. A fascinating character, Roberts took the unprecedented step of enrolling at University of Chicago at the age of thirty-six in 1917, pursuing her ambition for a college education and her love of literature.