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Death Comes for the Archbishop

Autor Willa Cather
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 dec 2023
In 1851 Father Jean Marie Latour comes to serve as the Apostolic Vicar to New Mexico. What he finds is a vast territory of red hills and tortuous arroyos, American by law but Mexican and Indian in custom and belief. In the almost forty years that follow, Latour spreads his faith in the only way he knows—gently, all the while contending with an unforgiving landscape, derelict and sometimes openly rebellious priests, and his own loneliness. Out of these events, Cather gives us an indelible vision of life unfolding in a place where time itself seems suspended.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781454951063
ISBN-10: 1454951060
Pagini: 210
Dimensiuni: 132 x 200 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Editura: Little Brown
Colecția Union Square & Co.
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Recenzii

A powerful piece of writing, rich with the essence of a poor but beautiful country and a simple yet dignified people
A tremendous, ranging story, economical and distilled as poetry
Quite simply a masterpiece . . . I am completely bowled over by it; by the power of its writing, by the vividness of its scene painting and by the stories it tells . . . This is a book which I go on rereading
Its whole effect works slowly and mysteriously . . . a major, and rare, artistic achievement

Notă biografică

Willa Cather was a Pulitzer prize-winning American writer, best known for her novels of Nebraskan frontier life. Born in 1873 near Winchester, Virginia, she moved with her family to Catherton, Nebraska in 1883, and the landscape went on to have a formative effect on her. Before becoming a full-time writer, Cather worked as a journalist, a magazine editor and a teacher.


Her first novel, Alexander¿s Bridge, was published in 1912, followed by titles including O Pioneers! (1913); The Song of the Lark (1915); My Ántonia (1918); One of Ours (1922), for which she won the Pulitzer Prize; Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927) and Sapphira and the Slave Girl (1940). She died in New York in 1947.