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Raintree County (1948)

door Ross Lockridge

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378967,498 (4.14)69
Throughout a single day in 1892, John Shawnessy recalls the great moments of his life?from the love affairs of his youth in Indiana, to the battles of the Civil War, to the politics of the Gilded Age, to his homecoming as schoolteacher, husband, and father. Shawnessy is the epitome of the place and period in which he lives, a rural land of springlike women, shady gamblers, wandering vagabonds, and soapbox orators. Yet here on the banks of the Shawmucky River, which weaves its primitive course through Raintree County, Indiana, he also feels and obeys ancient rhythms. A number-one… (meer)
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1-5 van 9 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Watch the movie.

Seriously, this book is a rambling, at times incoherent, self-indulgent story of one man whose life is told in vignettes in no chronological order. IMO, even Maxwell Perkins wouldn't have touched. ( )
  Gifford_MacShane | Mar 24, 2023 |
i found this book a kind of counterblast to the preceding Civil War blockbuster "Gone with the Wind!" In my mind the two are seenasthe opposite visions of "The American Dream". while Scarlett works out a purely personal destiny, concentrating very much on her emotional satisfaction, her prosperity, and, at times, her personal safety, and the externalities of life are entered into only so far as they effect her, Ross Lockridge's John Shawnessey is very much a public centered man, intent mostly on his effects on the community, and those surrounding him. His quest for the mythical "Raintree" is crowned with at least a vision of the spirit of his place, the golden tree with its golden frit. His love life has an obligatory disappointment, but ends with a level of acceptance and comfort. His southern belle, though wooed and cared for, just destroys herself due to her own defects. Thus a portrait of the Confederacy that is still a valid critique. I like his prose much better that that of Mitchell, and I could see in Lockridge's character a portrait of a far more worthy character. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Feb 13, 2022 |
What a great book. It covers one day in a life, and the memories of a lifetime... Many may say that this is the Great American Novel. I agree. As I read it, the novel calls up images of America similar to Whitman. I highly recommend it.
( )
  Chrissylou62 | Aug 1, 2020 |
i've been a voracious reader all throughout my long adult life. I read this book twice -- once in high school, again in college and liked it. i've just read it again and can finally understand what i really didn't the first two times. it's language, especially when john/ny muses about nature and the beauty of his native surroundings, i agree, is truly poetic. i also believe the book could have done without about 150-200 pages. as rapt as i was, i caught myself thinking about skipping this or that; i'd pretty much read it on earlier pages. ditto the endless dialectics between john and the perfessor. nevertheless, Raintree County will remain the most beautiful book i've ever read and i know of nothing closer to the "Great American Novel," if there is such a thing. p.s. in my opinion, the hollywood movie in 1959 was an insult. ( )
  LindaRogers | Jul 9, 2012 |
It may seem odd to be writing a review of a book written more than 60 years ago. In my case, the book is vibrant and meaningful. Raintree County is set in a mythical part of Indiana close to where I grew up, in Bloomington. The author, Ross Lockridge Jr. lived just down the street from my family. He was a young man. He was also a friend of our neighbor, Alfred Kinsey, for whom my mother, Mildred Hawksworth Lowell a Professor of Library Science at Indiana University, was librarian for Dr. Kinsey’s famous Human Sexuality Institute.

Upon publication in 1947, Raintree County was an instantaneous best-seller leading shortly to a major studio contract for a movie starring Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift. One of the Lockridge children, young Ross, was my classmate in elementary school at Elm Heights Elementary. He would share the details of the movie process and, as I recall now more than 55 years later, being charmed by the famous players in the movie when the family visited the sets. I could only have been 7 or 8 at the time (born in 1946) but the magic of living in the midst of a famous novelist and the wonder of a Hollywood film are vibrant memories.

At the peak of professional success, Mr. Lockridge committed suicide in a garage. I recall being dumbfounded as a child. “Why would he kill himself?” I asked my mother. “He had achieved so much.”

I do not exactly remember my mother’s response. But the question has lingered in my heart ever since. I have assumed the answer to be along the lines of – “Life is complex, son, even in the lap of glorious success one can become lost. Is this all there is for all of my work? Mr. Lockridge was a fine man. He must have had a torment that another cannot imagine.”

From that time to this, I have always dreamed of being a writer. I have done non-fiction professional books for many years, and am only now into the fiction business. For some reason, the image of these questions has always crept into my mind when I have focused on the possibility of success as a fiction writer.

“What would it be like to succeed? What did Ross Lockridge Jr. feel when his first and only novel achieved instantaneous critical and financial success, followed by a major league movie contract? What would drive him to end his life?

In recent years, I have moved from writing fiction manuscripts and putting them on the shelf to seeking a route to commercial publication. As I began this journey, I wanted to go back and see if I could answer these questions of a lifetime. First, I read the biography of Mr. Lockridge written by his son Larry, Shade of the Raintree. Then I picked up Raintree County itself, a tome of some 1,060 pages in the edition that was given to me as a birthday present by my sweetheart.

Raintree County is a masterpiece, obviously written in the hopes of becoming a Great American Novel. It traces the life and times of an absorbed young writer (John Wickcliff Shawnessy, a/k/a Johnny) from a rural county before, during, and after the Civil War. The central characters twist and turn through all of the pages as they age. The chronology of time switches back and forth, challenging the reader to keep all of the pieces in perspective. The characters include an elusive young lady whose nudity by the river and innocent frolic in a haystack reverberate through the story (Nell Gaither), a teacher and confessor (the Perfessor), a Southern belle who frolics with our hero one afternoon after too much cider and claims pregnancy, then becomes his first wife, an athletic arch-enemy who becomes a prosperous national businessman (Cash Carney), a competitor for the femme who becomes a U.S. Senator, and a cast of other characters that create the magic of the story.

Like Gone With the Wind, Ulysses, and other sweeping stories, one gets to the end (when Johnny comes marching home from the War) wondering what the point of the story is. Johnny began with the hope, aspiration, and innocence of youth, seeking answer to the riddle of the naked woman in the post office. In the end, Johnny seems to be seeking to find what he has lost along the way, perhaps the answer to the riddle.

One can never know why this skilled author took his own life. Perhaps the answer is that he poured himself into this fascinating story that is so full of life, complete with its riddles, paradoxes, and mysteries, and lost his way in the process, finding himself unable to deal with the adulation that poured over him (or the frustration of dealing with publishers, agents, studios and the other characters in a story that he had not charted or, maybe, even contemplated). As Lockridge ended the story with Johnny’s determination that “each man had to build his world again [periodically]!” It is difficult to return to the idealized world of the young, as Cash Carney laments in an epitath to lost youth (on page 848 of this edition).

The thoughtful framework of Raintree County, the life of its author, and the biography of his son seem to cry for a re-telling of the story in another generation.

In short, Raintree County is the great American novel and should be back on reading lists. The essential issues and messages that are explored in these pages are present in the lives of each of us. ( )
5 stem CymLowell | Jan 17, 2010 |
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Throughout a single day in 1892, John Shawnessy recalls the great moments of his life?from the love affairs of his youth in Indiana, to the battles of the Civil War, to the politics of the Gilded Age, to his homecoming as schoolteacher, husband, and father. Shawnessy is the epitome of the place and period in which he lives, a rural land of springlike women, shady gamblers, wandering vagabonds, and soapbox orators. Yet here on the banks of the Shawmucky River, which weaves its primitive course through Raintree County, Indiana, he also feels and obeys ancient rhythms. A number-one

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