The White
By (Author) Deborah Larsen
Random House USA Inc
Vintage Books
9th September 2003
United States
General
Fiction
Fiction: literary and general non-genre
FIC
Paperback
240
Width 132mm, Height 201mm, Spine 16mm
228g
In 1758, when Mary Jemison is about sixteen, a Shawnee raiding party captures her Irish family near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Mary is the only one not killed and scalped. She is instead given to two Seneca sisters to replace their brother who was killed by whites. Emerging slowly from shock, Mary--now named Two-Falling-Voices--begins to make her home in Seneca culture and the wild landscape. She goes on to marry a Delaware, then a Seneca, and, though she contemplates it several times, never rejoins white society. Larsen alludes beautifully to the way Mary apprehends the brutality of both the white colonists and the native tribes; and how, open-eyed and independent, she thrives as a genuine American.
[R]iveting . . .lyrical. . . . [A]n indelible portrait of a remarkable woman. . . . [A] brutal and beautiful novel. New York Times
[B] oth a stirring adventure tale. . .and a lyrical meditation on one womans coming of age. . . .Larsens perfect prose captures both the brutality and unexpected beauty of Marys life. . . . For all its frontier romance . . . a stubbornly unvarnished tale. Los Angeles Times Book Review
Hypnotic . . . rich and rewarding. . . . Other writers have tried this before, but [none] so gracefully and at the same time so forcefully. Here is the old world of the New World, both a dream and our shared history, for our reading pleasure and our thoughtful consideration of what we all have lost and gained. San Francisco Chronicle
[A] lyrical excursion on a deep historical sea....Beneath the smooth beauty of its descriptive language, there is...terrific concision and lightness. The New York Times Book Review
[C]urious and fascinating . . . a saga of hardship and casual tragedy with brilliant moments of joy.--The Washington Post Book World
Illuminated by a wonderful sense of detail and natural rhythm, of landscape, body, and the shifts and changes of time.Minneapolis Star Tribune
There is a wealth of life in this spare novel. At times the short sentences and spare language can feel light and ephemeral, but the weight of the writing is hidden in such brevity. The shards of images sink in to wash to the surface long after the last page is read.The Oregonian
An accomplished first novel. . .Larsen handles. . .complex emotions and her dueling desires with sublety, and her elegant prose vividly brings Marys world and thoughts to life.Booklist
A brave. . .stark, snowdeep novel.Austin-American Statesman
Being American is to wear a coat of many colors. . .Larsens novel is an instructive, winning reminder that the coat was once woven from broadcloth and buckskin, feathers and silk, in a fabric as hard to unravel as it is to deny.Daily News
Deborah Larsen grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota, and currently lives with her husband in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Her collection of poetry, Stitching Porcelain, was published in 1991, and her poems and short stories have appeared in The Nation, The Yale Review, The Quarterly, Oxford Magazine, and The New Yorker, among other publications. She has been a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Yale. She teaches creative writing at Gettysburg College, where she holds the Merle S. Boyer Chair.