My Antonia
by Willa Cather
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Read in September, 2006
When I first arrived in Indiana in August 2004, I didn't know what I was expecting. My ancestors had first arrived in that Midwestern state in 1820, when it was still comparatively wild and unsettled. They were the true pioneers, but nonetheless, as I got out of my little Corolla to stretch my legs, I felt like I was a trailblazer, too.
We had stopped at a little gas station and truck stop just beyond the Indiana state line. I took a moment to call the relatives, let them know I was two hour...more
We had stopped at a little gas station and truck stop just beyond the Indiana state line. I took a moment to call the relatives, let them know I was two hour...more
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Read in May, 2008
John Sullivan said he loved Willa Cather and recommended that I read some of her work since I'd apparently missed every American literature class that had it on the required reading list. He also said she was good for those writers who have female protags operating in male-dominated areas (both geographically and vocationally).
I agree that Antonia is an interesting character and several of the short-stories that make up the books "chapters" - this is clearly a cut and pasted book,...more
I agree that Antonia is an interesting character and several of the short-stories that make up the books "chapters" - this is clearly a cut and pasted book,...more
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literaryfiction
Read in September, 2006
When I first arrived in Indiana in August 2004, I didn't know what I was expecting. My ancestors had first arrived in that Midwestern state in 1820, when it was still comparatively wild and unsettled. They were the true pioneers, but nonetheless, as I got out of my little Corolla to stretch my legs, I felt like I was a trailblazer, too.
We had stopped at a little gas station and truck stop just beyond the Indiana state line. I took a moment to call the relatives, let them know I was two hours...more
We had stopped at a little gas station and truck stop just beyond the Indiana state line. I took a moment to call the relatives, let them know I was two hours...more
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Read in April, 2008
I read Willa Cather's My Ántonia for the Decades Challenge. I wanted to read it after having enjoyed My Mortal Enemy last July. While I enjoyed pieces of My Ántonia, it didn't hold my attention like My Mortal Enemy.
My Antonia is broken into five uneven parts and grew out of some short stories Cather had previous written. The five parts are The Shimerdas (which comprises the largest chunk of the novel), The Hired Girls, Lena Lingard, The Pioneer Woman's Story, Cuzak's Story. It's in the Len...more
My Antonia is broken into five uneven parts and grew out of some short stories Cather had previous written. The five parts are The Shimerdas (which comprises the largest chunk of the novel), The Hired Girls, Lena Lingard, The Pioneer Woman's Story, Cuzak's Story. It's in the Len...more
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Read in February, 2008
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Read in January, 2008
Quite simply, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. This book was a real breath of fresh air given the plain no-nonsense style of Ms. Cather, especially when contrasted with that of Henry James, whom I had just finished reading.
My favorite aspect of the novel was in its vivid descriptions of the setting. My knowledge of the State of Nebraska was basically limited to thinking of it as a place where corn is grown, where the option offense was close to unstopable, where Warren Buffet calls home, an...more
My favorite aspect of the novel was in its vivid descriptions of the setting. My knowledge of the State of Nebraska was basically limited to thinking of it as a place where corn is grown, where the option offense was close to unstopable, where Warren Buffet calls home, an...more
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I've been doing a lot of re-reading lately, and this is yet another case of it. I first read this book in either high school or college. I remember it as an amazing book, and yet as I read it this time, I couldn't really see what I'd thought was amazing about it. It's not a bad book by any means - maybe I'd just somehow built it up in my mind to be something that it couldn't be. Anyway, the story is of a man reflecting upon his childhood in the Nebraska prairie and telling about the people h...more
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Here's a book about ultimate friendship. A book that plays off of the belief that when you make a real friend, a friend you respect, a friend you love, you can make a connection with that friend forever. H.L. Mencken, an American critic commented that, "No romantic novel ever written in America . . . is one half so beautiful as My Ántonia.” I enjoyed this book because it is different in the way it is written and I liked the style. I haven't read a lot of modern books lately but I have re...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
babel fans, dykes
This was my first time reading Willa Cather and I was pleasantly surprised. The writing is simple and the story is told through short, two-to-five page vingettes of life in the west.... it actually reminded me of Isaac Babel's Red Calvary short stories - short, simple, focused snapshots and scenes that are loosely related because they share an observant if not a boring and mostly inactive narrator. I mean, sure, the Red Calvary Stories are about wartime Russia and this is about Nebraska immigran...more
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Read in January, 2007
"My Ántonia" tells the story of Jim Burden (the book's narrator), a young boy of 10 who is sent from Virginia to live with his grandparents in the harsh prairie of Nebraska, after he is orphaned. On the same train, an immigrant family from Bohemia also arrives with a 14-year old daughter by the name of Ántonia Shimerdas and the family becomes the closest neighbor to the Burden's. The story is told as a memoir years later by Jim as he recalls his interaction with the Shimerdas' and h...more
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Read in April, 2008
One doesn't hear much about Willa Cather these days, but this is a very good book that should be on every family book shelf. "My Antonia" is set on the Nebraska plains in the late 19th, early 20th century and revolves around Jim and his fascination with an older immigrant girl, Antonia, and their relationship over the years, the travel and the times that pulls them together and apart. There are some wonderful images that Cather creates here of the landscapes: a forgotten plow that si...more
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recommends it for: who care about American literature
Read in April, 2008
recommended to John by:
read it to teach itrecommends it for: who care about American literature
My latest encounter with a masterwork -- a novel I just completed in order to teach, and one that seduced me wonderfully and quite unexpectedly. Cather's Nebraska story goes over ground that's never much mattered to me, Midwestern farm country. Yet she made made the experience ache and thrill marvelously, via her poetic command of landscape and season, her exactitude when it comes to tools and foods and skin texture, and above all her penetrating sympathy for every figure, from the venal to th...more
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Okay...I give Cather's My Antonia a four for (nearly) purely sentimental reasons. I first encountered it as a junior high girl growing up on the great plains just an hour or so south of Red Cloud, NE. And it was the first reading experience I had that connected me to my geographical place rather than transporting me elsewhere. That experience may be common for children in London or New York, but not western Kansas.
As an adult reader, I find Jim approaching repulsive as a narrator, his cha...more
As an adult reader, I find Jim approaching repulsive as a narrator, his cha...more
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Read in May, 2008
I loved Antonia as well! And many of the other female characters were amazing and full of life, willing to act in ways they're not supposed to act and accomplish more than others might think them capable of.
The narrator (Jim) drove me crazy at times, though. (The idea that she was always *his* seemed selfish, to say the least.) He constantly feels the need to "forgive" Antonia even though, in my mind at least, he has no need to. He often is angry at her for silly reasons, and it's ...more
The narrator (Jim) drove me crazy at times, though. (The idea that she was always *his* seemed selfish, to say the least.) He constantly feels the need to "forgive" Antonia even though, in my mind at least, he has no need to. He often is angry at her for silly reasons, and it's ...more
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Read in June, 2008
This book is a slice of Americana, a vision of the first generation of suffering immigrants to eke out an existence on the harsh prairies. It is a memoir of the narrator, Jim Burden, of his childhood and coming-of-age in the farms and towns of Nebraska, and his remembrances of love for Antonia the Bohemian girl. Jim Burden apologizes for his work at the beginning, noting that he has written it quickly and in the order in which it has come to him. That explains the somewhat fragmented nature of t...more
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Read in November, 2006
Title: My Antonia
Author: Willa Cather
Genre: Classic, set in late 19th century Nebraska
Pages: 266
Rating (out of 5 stars): *****
Reviewed by: Jenn and Ben
Description: My Antonia tells the story of a Bohemian immigrant family in the late 19th century. It catalogues the joys and struggles of early western farm life, the rich stories of immigrants, and the simplicity of growing up in an empty land. The characters are vivid and real, and they have much to teach the reader.
Thoughts: ...more
Author: Willa Cather
Genre: Classic, set in late 19th century Nebraska
Pages: 266
Rating (out of 5 stars): *****
Reviewed by: Jenn and Ben
Description: My Antonia tells the story of a Bohemian immigrant family in the late 19th century. It catalogues the joys and struggles of early western farm life, the rich stories of immigrants, and the simplicity of growing up in an empty land. The characters are vivid and real, and they have much to teach the reader.
Thoughts: ...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
American history buffs
I suggested we read this for book club this month. While it is not going to be one of my favorites, it is a pleasant book. I'd describe it as two notches more difficult than L.I. Wilder's Little House books. It doesn't have a plot but tells of the lives of the immigrants who settled on the Nebraska prairie and made a life for themselves there. The early years there were difficult and full of hard work, but the rewards were great for the successful settlers. Antonia was the trusting, affecti...more
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
EVERYONE!
I absolutely adored this novel! I just fell in love with all the characters and their sweet, youthful innocence. They really came alive for me. It really made me appreciate the differences in others and see how ridiculous it is to be judgmental and unkind. I loved the sheer nostalgia aspect about it too: the past as so much more beautiful, meaningful, and worthwhile than the present. It follows the coming of age of Jim Burden, who, at 10-years old, lost both of his parents and went to live ...more
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Read in August, 2005
I remember having heard great things about it since I was in junior high, so I was excited to see it was next on my reading list. The book basically chronicles the life of a young boy, Jim, and his friendship with a Bohemian girl, Antonia, who moves out to the prairies of Nebraska with her family. It follows them from childhood on the farm to teenhood in town, to their adult lives. I loved the fact that the book was very uplifting and full of lots of good people who worked hard and had strong va...more
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Read in July, 2008
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