My Home is Far Away My Home is Far Away

My Home is Far Away

    • $11.99
    • $11.99

Publisher Description

My Home is Far Away is the most precisely autobiographical of Powell’s fifteen novels. In this family chronicle set in early twentieth century Ohio, young Marcia Willard’s family struggles to keep up with the rapidly changing times, and Marcia endures disillusionment, cruelty, and betrayal to forge a survivor’s sense of independence. John Updike has compared Powell with Theodore Dreiser, Willa Cather, Sherwood Anderson, “and those other Midwestern writers who felt something epic in the national shift from rural to urban, from provincial sequestration to metropolitan liberation.” By 1941, when Powell set to work on My Home Is Far Away, she was better known for the smart, boozy, bawdy, hilarious send-ups of Manhattan high and low life. She had begun to attain a reputation for high sophistication and nothing could be less “sophisticated” – in the glittering, all-knowing, furiously present-tense, big-city manner Powell had perfected – than My Home Is Far Away.
This was the month of cherries and peaches, of green apples beyond the grape arbor, of little dandelion ghosts in the grass, of sour grass and four-leaf clovers, of still dry heat holding the smell of nasturtiums and dying lilacs. This was the best month of all and the best day. It was not birthday, Easter, Christmas, or picnic, but all these things and something else, something wonderful, something utterly unknown. The two little girls in embroidered white Sunday dresses knew no way to express their secret joy but by whirling each other dizzily over the lawn crying, “We’re moving, we’re moving! We’re moving to London Junction!”
My Home Is Far Away is one of the very few examples of a book written for adults, with an adult command of the language, that maintains the vantage point of a hungry, serious child throughout. It might be likened to a memoir that has been penned not with the usual tranquility of distance but rather with the sense that everything happening to the characters is happening right now, without any promise of eventual escape, without any assurance that childhood, too, shall pass away.
My Home is Far Away had been out of print for sixty years when Steerforth reissued it in 1995. It received immediate widespread acclaim, and was featured on the cover of the New York Times Book Review, where Terry Teachout called it “one of the permanent masterpieces of childhood, comparable with David Copperfield, What Maisie Knew and the early reminiscences of Colette,” and where he proclaimed Powell to be “one of this country’s least recognized great novelists.”

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
1998
June 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
319
Pages
PUBLISHER
Steerforth Press
SELLER
Penguin Random House LLC
SIZE
2.6
MB

More Books Like This

Coleman Hill Coleman Hill
2023
The Ballymara Road The Ballymara Road
2015
Anne of Ingleside Anne of Ingleside
2019
Anne of Ingleside Anne of Ingleside
2022
The Wartime Sisters The Wartime Sisters
2019
The Staggerford Flood The Staggerford Flood
2002

More Books by Dawn Powell

A Time to Be Born A Time to Be Born
1998
Turn, Magic Wheel Turn, Magic Wheel
1999
The Wicked Pavilion The Wicked Pavilion
1998
The Locusts Have No King The Locusts Have No King
1998
Angels on Toast Angels on Toast
1998