My Antonia

Front Cover
Signet Classic, 1994 - 286 pages
Along with O Pioneers!, this magnificent, moving story of a pioneer woman is considered the finest of Willa Cather's prairie novels, a true American classic in both its intimate, episodic telling and its theme. Emigrating from Bohemia to Black Hawk, Nebraska, with her family, Antonia finds no white-framed farmhouse or snug barn. Instead, the cultured Shimerda family finds itself huddled into a primitive sod house buffeted by the ceaselessly, blowing winds of the Midwest prairie. For her childhood friend Jim Burden, Antonia comes to embody the elemental spirit of this frontier, despite the events that nearly destroy her family and leave her seduced and abandoned.But passionate, beautiful, and strong enough to work the fields alongside the men, Antonia survives without compromising the rich, deep power of her nature. And Willa Cather's lush descriptions of the rolling Nebraska grasslands interweave with the warmly human tale of a woman coming of age in the early days of the century to become an epic tale and a chronicle of America's past. My Antonia is one of those rare, highly prized works of great literature which not only enriches its readers but immerses them in a tale superbly told.

About the author (1994)

Born in Virginia in 1873 and raised on a Nebraska ranch, Willa Cather is known for her beautifully evocative short stories and novels about the American West. Cather became the managing editor for McClure's Magazine in 1906 and lived for forty years in New York City with her companion Edith Lewis. In 1922 Cather won the Pulitzer Prize for One of Ours, the story of a Western boy in World War I. In 1933 she was awarded the Prix Femina Americaine "for distinguished literary accomplishments." She died in 1947. Photo: AKG London

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