Crossing Bully Creek
by Margaret Erhart
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 the 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 the death of life as they know it in the South.
The book moves back and forth between the 1920s and 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 (a descendant of William Tecumseh Sherman), to the
servant Rutha, from his saucy granddaughter to the man running the
plantation for his son, characters black and white and in-between move
through a time when old traditions linger, yet begin to give way—subtly
transformed through the small, determined acts of a few individuals.
Margaret Erhart
Author's Bio:Margaret Erhart is the author of three previous novels, Unusual Company, Old Love, and Augusta Cotton. She writes about travel and the outdoors for the New York Times
and other publications. Born in New York City, she now lives in
Flagstaff, Arizona. As a child, she spent time visiting her relatives
on a plantation in south Georgia.
Awards:Milkweed National Fiction Prize: 2005
Quotes:"Winners of the Milkweed National Fiction Prize are famous for
lighting up the dusty crevices, forgotten plains and thorny underbrush
of American life and history. . . . Erhart's descriptions of her
characters are reminiscent of Jane Austen's, in their devastating
precision. . . . . Crossing Bully Creek
is a story about how change happens, and about the human habits that
spin on and on, like scratched records with a skip, trying in vain to
prevent it."—Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Crossing Bully Creek is perceptive, touching, and in the
end thought-provoking in its portrayal of a time when everything is
changing against the backdrop of the eternal truths of the
heart."—Fenton Johnson, author of Keeping Faith and Scissors, Paper, Rock
“Erhart's well crafted, compelling portrait of the Deep South from the
Depression to the Vietnam era swings back and forth in time.”—Booklist
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Price:
$ 24.00
Binding: Cloth
Availability In Stock: 339
immediately
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Published: 2005
Size: 5.5 x 8.5
Genre: Fiction
Pages: 328
ISBN: 9781571310422
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