My ÁntoniaRandom House Publishing Group, 2000 M11 1 - 288 pages 'The best thing I've done is My Antonia,' recalled Willa Cather. 'I feel I've made a contribution to American letters with that book.' Set against the vast Nebraska prairie, Cather's elegiac novel features one of the most winning heroines in American fiction—Antonia Shimerda—a young woman whose strength and passion epitomize the triumphant vitality of this country's pioneers. 'If, as is often said, every novelist is born to write one thing, then the one thing that Willa Cather was born to write was first fully realized in My Antonia,' observed Pulitzer Prize-winning author Wallace Stegner. 'The prose is. . .flexible, evocative; the structure at once free and intricately articulated; the characters stretch into symbolic suggestiveness as naturally as trees cast shadows in the long light of a prairie evening; the theme is the fully exposed, complexly understood theme of the American orphan or exile, struggling to find a place between an Old World left behind and a New World not yet created. . . . No writer ever posed that essential aspect of the American experience more warmly, with more nostalgic lyricism, or with a surer understanding of what it means.' |
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afternoon ain’t Ambrosch Ántonia asked baby barn began better Black Hawk Bohemian boys brought Burden called carried clothes cold coming Cutter dance dark door dress early everything eyes face farm father feel feet fellow felt fields friends Fuchs garden gave girls gone grandfather grandmother grass ground hair hands happened hard Harling head hear heard horses Jake kind kitchen knew laughed leave Lena light lived looked loved married morning mother never night once Otto Peter play poor remember road seemed seen Shimerda shoulder snow sometimes standing stood stopped story summer supper talk tell things thought Tiny told Tony took town trees trying turned walked warm watched wind window winter woman young