Bitter Is the Wind: A Novel
Autor Jim McDermotten Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 feb 2016
Do Americans live in a land of freedom and equality where people with vision, brains, and a strong work ethic can have rewarding lives? Or is ours a society where well-being, dignity, and independence are reserved for a narrow elite?
Bitter Is The Wind is a coming-of-age novel that traces the lives of George Johnson Jr. and his father from the rural blue-collar landscape of upstate New York in the 1970s to the halls of Wharton Business School and the heights of Wall Street. After a family tragedy strengthens their familial bond, the Johnsons contend with assembly line monotony, unfulfilled dreams of baseball stardom, and they learn what it means to be tempted, trapped, jailed, and ignored by a seemingly uncaring God.
First time novelist Jim McDermott opens a window on the American working class and its aching desire for financial security, recognition, and respect. His characters confront a modern world with limited possibilities, ambiguous mores, and authorities who seem devoted to keeping the brightest and most talented members of the underclass on the other side of town. Bitter Is The Wind deconstructs the American dream.
Bitter Is The Wind is a coming-of-age novel that traces the lives of George Johnson Jr. and his father from the rural blue-collar landscape of upstate New York in the 1970s to the halls of Wharton Business School and the heights of Wall Street. After a family tragedy strengthens their familial bond, the Johnsons contend with assembly line monotony, unfulfilled dreams of baseball stardom, and they learn what it means to be tempted, trapped, jailed, and ignored by a seemingly uncaring God.
First time novelist Jim McDermott opens a window on the American working class and its aching desire for financial security, recognition, and respect. His characters confront a modern world with limited possibilities, ambiguous mores, and authorities who seem devoted to keeping the brightest and most talented members of the underclass on the other side of town. Bitter Is The Wind deconstructs the American dream.
Preț: 93.85 lei
Preț vechi: 125.56 lei
-25%
Puncte Express: 141
Preț estimativ în valută:
16.61€ • 19.30$ • 14.39£
16.61€ • 19.30$ • 14.39£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781945572159
ISBN-10: 1945572159
Pagini: 179
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Rare Bird Books
Colecția Rare Bird Books, A Vireo Book
ISBN-10: 1945572159
Pagini: 179
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Rare Bird Books
Colecția Rare Bird Books, A Vireo Book
Recenzii
"Like [Raymond] Carver...McDermott has a way of beautifully and crisply illuminating the thoughts and feelings of solid, blue-collar Americans."
—The Huffington Post
"A readable...story of generational tensions in America."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Bitter is the Wind is a...good first novel...spiced with news events from the period that will bring back memories for anyone who grew up during the '70s."
—Portland Book Review
"Coming-of-age new adult and adult readers will find much to like in Bitter is the Wind, a full-flavored read that provides more depth and social and economic background than most."
—Diane Donovan, Midwest Book Review
"Honest and poignant, Bitter is the Wind is a promising novel and points to McDermott as an author to watch."
—John Murray,San Francisco Book Review
"I was struck by the clarity and simplicity of the prose—which reminded me of Hemingway's Nick Adams stories."
—Sami Moubayed
"Bitter is the Wind, is a heartwarming story of the interactions between a father and son after they face horrible tragedy and get older. McDermott has done a fantastic job creating characters that are believable and easy to sympathize with. It is seldom that you come across a story about love, loss, and survival between a father and son that is not overly sappy or cliché."
—Amy Synoracki, Manhattan Book Review
"A debut novel about the troubled relationship between a working-class father and his son."
—Kirkus, Starred Review
"A pungent slice of working-class life in 1970s America, as well as a deeply-affecting father-son story. Bitter is the Wind reminded me how hard it's always been to achieve success for those who weren't handed it on a silver platter."
—Stephen Fife, author of The 13th Boy and Dreaming in the Maze of Love-Grief-Madness
"A compelling tale of American aspiration and accomplishment told from the perspective of characters customarily deprived of opportunity, working folk whose lives and voices are rarely presented in first rate fiction."
—Frederic Hunter, author of The Girl Ran Away and A Year at the Edge of the Jungle
—The Huffington Post
"A readable...story of generational tensions in America."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Bitter is the Wind is a...good first novel...spiced with news events from the period that will bring back memories for anyone who grew up during the '70s."
—Portland Book Review
"Coming-of-age new adult and adult readers will find much to like in Bitter is the Wind, a full-flavored read that provides more depth and social and economic background than most."
—Diane Donovan, Midwest Book Review
"Honest and poignant, Bitter is the Wind is a promising novel and points to McDermott as an author to watch."
—John Murray,San Francisco Book Review
"I was struck by the clarity and simplicity of the prose—which reminded me of Hemingway's Nick Adams stories."
—Sami Moubayed
"Bitter is the Wind, is a heartwarming story of the interactions between a father and son after they face horrible tragedy and get older. McDermott has done a fantastic job creating characters that are believable and easy to sympathize with. It is seldom that you come across a story about love, loss, and survival between a father and son that is not overly sappy or cliché."
—Amy Synoracki, Manhattan Book Review
"A debut novel about the troubled relationship between a working-class father and his son."
—Kirkus, Starred Review
"A pungent slice of working-class life in 1970s America, as well as a deeply-affecting father-son story. Bitter is the Wind reminded me how hard it's always been to achieve success for those who weren't handed it on a silver platter."
—Stephen Fife, author of The 13th Boy and Dreaming in the Maze of Love-Grief-Madness
"A compelling tale of American aspiration and accomplishment told from the perspective of characters customarily deprived of opportunity, working folk whose lives and voices are rarely presented in first rate fiction."
—Frederic Hunter, author of The Girl Ran Away and A Year at the Edge of the Jungle
Notă biografică
Jim McDermott is a nationally recognized business litigation attorney based in Portland, Oregon, where he lives with his wife and two daughters. He has worked on an assembly line and also represented multinational corporations. He is a graduate of Syracuse University and the University of Virginia Law School. Bitter Is the Wind, which he worked on for twenty-five years, is his first novel.