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Lädt ... The Cherry Pitvon Donald Harrington
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In 'The Cherry Pit', Clifford Stone - quixotic curator of arcane Americana at a Boston antiques foundation and a cataloguer of a 'vanished American past' - forsakes Boston and his icy wife to return to his hometown of Little Rock, Arkansas, and a life that is both instantly familiar and disturbingly strange. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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Nub is slowly losing zest for life in Boston with his frigid, too-familiar wife Pamela and a curatorial job. He holds the belief that society is disintegrating the values of the past and, and, er, it's bad (I've forgotten how it's phrased, exactly). In Little Rock, he has the thought of obtaining some carnal pleasures that have been absent in his marriage and reconnects with his old, racist friend Dall Hawkins; his black, childhood friend Naps; and a former girlfriend and black-haired mystery Margaret. He becomes rivals with a playwright who turns out to have the same beliefs and dismay about society as he does, although they never meet. It's a strange collection of events when I look back at it now, a rambling jumble.
I've come to hold the belief that "home" is made up of people and only incidentally associated with a physical location. Nub Stone returns home to Little Rock to try to figure some things out, and appears to come to the opposite conclusion. Or rather, he had the wrong people in mind? The events were a little wacky, but the love in the descriptions of place were palpable. ( )