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Angle of Repose
by Wallace Stegner
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bookshelves:
lori-s-favorite-books
recommends it for: anyone
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in July, 2008
recommended to Lori by:
Allegra Hakimrecommends it for: anyone
A poetic story with rich prose and thought provoking metaphors.....perfect for Book Club discussion. It's on my all time favorite book list. I was amazed at the author's attention to details with such accuracy and percision from the historical Western frontier life down to the very flowers in bloom. This book is a treasure.
The marriage between Oliver and Susan Ward was filled with adversity, love, disappointments, devotion, temptation, and tragedy. Both characters were morally exceptio...more
The marriage between Oliver and Susan Ward was filled with adversity, love, disappointments, devotion, temptation, and tragedy. Both characters were morally exceptio...more
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Read in February, 2008
I just finished a wonderful short story by Alice Munro in the most recent New Yorker. And the first adjective that occurred to me about Angle of Repose was one it shared with the Munro story, patience. There is no hurry and no waste in either work. Lyman Ward, one of two main characters in Angle of Repose, a novel rich in characters—the other main character is Ward’s grandmother Susan Burling Ward—is in late middle-age with a failing body and a distressed life. His wife is gone. One of his...more
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Read in August, 2008
Three or four years ago I read where somebody thought Angle of Repose was probably the greatest American novel of the 20th century. That bothered me, because I'd never heard of it. I bought a copy, got about 100 pages into it, and bogged down.
I'm proud to say I've finally read it all (parts of it several times). It is indeed a great novel, and more ambitious than some of the others one might think of as the best. But I'm giving it only four stars because of the length and the sustaine...more
I'm proud to say I've finally read it all (parts of it several times). It is indeed a great novel, and more ambitious than some of the others one might think of as the best. But I'm giving it only four stars because of the length and the sustaine...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Patricia by:
Joan Clissoldrecommends it for: My husband so we can talk about it at length!
This book is beautifully written and thought provoking... as I have come to expect from Stegner. Lyman Ward is writting a biography of his grandmother, specifically of her marriage. His grandparents' marriage parallels his own. And he is searching for the meaning of the phrase "angle of repose". However, Lyman Wards future is yet unwritten and his grandparents have long since passed on. We observe Lyman trying to learn more about himself, through his study of the past.
One major th...more
One major th...more
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bookshelves:
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Read in January, 2007
Strange history with this book. I bought at a USC used book sale for $0.25 because it was a "classic" and it has gathered dust for more than twenty years unread. For no special reason I finally get around to taking it down. It was as though our time had finally arrived. The story of Susan Burling Ward is told through the eyes of her grandson, Lyman Ward. Lyman is a retired and disabled historian who, after achieving a measure of success and fame, decides to spend his last years turni...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to BT by:
Goodreads reviewersrecommends it for: Nobody
I read this book based largely on the Goodreads reviews. Maybe I'm not as smart as other reviewers, or maybe other reviewers give it high praise because it was a Pulitzer Prize winner and they didn't want to look dumb (something to which I have no aversion), or maybe this was just a fluke, but I didn't think this book was worth reading. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. I started the book about 4 or 5 times, and when I finally did slog through it, it was in 5 and 10 page increments. I just ...more
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Read in February, 2007
The next review is for Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner. This was our latest book club read for the month of February. It is a beautifully written, eloquent, descriptive book. It has been highly, highly recommended to me by several people...readers who I respect. Most of them have said that it was the best book they have ever read. Wow! That is saying a lot. This book is a very long and epic tale of a husband and wife who move to the west in the late 1800's to settle. This was good news to me....more
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Read in June, 2007
recommended to Annalisa by:
Jordan
When I started this book, I was drawn in by the poetic writing style, but not Lyman's story. But once the tale weaved into the grandma's, I was hooked. I didn't worry about where the story was taking me or why, I just jumped into Susan's life and mind. I related so much because Oliver's personality is so much like Brett's: hard-working, good to the core to the point of vulnerability, stubborn, and clam-like in confrontation. I call it the puppy dog effect where you are upset about a misdeed, but...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
Jamie, Ellen
This is the second time I read this novel. Our book club will be discussing it today, and I want it to be fresh in my mind. I love Wallace Stegner's descriptions! It makes me want to visit the west and just look, listen and experience the landscape. I liked the way he intermingled the narrator's story with that of his grandmother. Hers was an interesting story. She was not the "typical" pioneer wife as she used her talents to help to support her family. And I have to admit I fel...more
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Read in August, 1998
I listened on audiotape to this book about ten years ago and it remains in my memory one of the classics of literature. For now, I hope you will look up Rick's review on this site for a beautiful analysis. I really can't improve on his writing.
"It’s a beautifully wrought novel, moving, compelling, and humane. Stegner writes with a strong narrative and descriptive voice that doesn’t fuss with either but allows them the space they need to impose themselves on the reader’s imaginati...more
"It’s a beautifully wrought novel, moving, compelling, and humane. Stegner writes with a strong narrative and descriptive voice that doesn’t fuss with either but allows them the space they need to impose themselves on the reader’s imaginati...more
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Read in July, 2008
a daunting book to say something about. it's pretty expansive, so it's kind of like trying to sum up war and peace. in fact, the two have a little bit to do with each other. angle of repose is kind of like the war and peace of the american west, in that it's an intergenerational family drama woven into a grand historical background...more
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Read in February, 2008
Wow, I really enjoyed reading this book! It was such a sad, sad story and just when you think it couldn't get worse, it did - maybe I enjoy unhappy endings... Nevertheless, Stegner is so deliciously descriptive and Lyman's narration was sometimes amusing and (very) frank.
In some ways I sympathized with Susan and understood how she may have felt leaving a life she loved behind and braving the unknown. I think that's what marriage is in general. (It also helped that she mentioned places like Po...more
In some ways I sympathized with Susan and understood how she may have felt leaving a life she loved behind and braving the unknown. I think that's what marriage is in general. (It also helped that she mentioned places like Po...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone, the older the better
Best book on the American West I've ever read. It reminded me of my pioneer heritage on every page! Everyone west of the Mississippi should read it. Buckle up! It's not an easy read...more like a "War and Peace" of the American West.
It gets better as you read on. My favorites passages were near the end; here are a couple:
Chapter VIII The Mesa, Part 5 (The entire chapter is great!)
His shadow moved, his boot hit the tiles, he reached a long arm. His fingers closed around...more
It gets better as you read on. My favorites passages were near the end; here are a couple:
Chapter VIII The Mesa, Part 5 (The entire chapter is great!)
His shadow moved, his boot hit the tiles, he reached a long arm. His fingers closed around...more
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This was Stegner's Pulitzer Prize winner and a marvelous book. His ability to surprise you with unexpected characters in even more unexpected settings is alway remarkable. This one, with its two story lines, one current and one half a century preceding, is full of beautiful, ugly, inventive, sturdy characters, and is always involving.
Like many of his books, his lead characters are crusty old men placed in situations that place them entirely outside their comfort zone. But the power to con...more
Like many of his books, his lead characters are crusty old men placed in situations that place them entirely outside their comfort zone. But the power to con...more
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Read in March, 2008
Such a complex (though readable) novel with so many themes that it's hard to know where to start. The wheelchair-bound narrator tells us this is a story of a marriage (that of his grandparents whom he knew until their deaths at advanced ages), but it's also the story of his wondering at his own (failed) marriage and why his wife left him when she did. Is he escaping into his grandmother's life to escape his own, or is he doing so to figure his own life out? The path to his insights is long (a...more
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Read in April, 2000
I have read this book twice so far. The first time, I was a single college student. The second time, I had been married about five years. I'm sure I will read it again a few more times. And I'm sure that the more years of marriage I've logged, the more I will get out of this book.
Marriage, and what it takes -- and takes out of you -- to make it work is the main theme of this book. Stegner has some profound things to say about it. But even before I could personally relate to the story's main...more
Marriage, and what it takes -- and takes out of you -- to make it work is the main theme of this book. Stegner has some profound things to say about it. But even before I could personally relate to the story's main...more
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Read in July, 2007
I read this book about two years ago ,and am going to read it again over this next week. It is a book both about history ,and fictional characters .These people are deeply drawn and you the reader are in their world and heads from the first page. This book is not just a look back but also about contemporary America ,family ,and the struggles we face when we face dependency.It can be confusing at times when the author moves from the distant past into the now it begins with ,but you quickly...more
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Stegner is a great writer. His prose is lovely and flowing. This book, however, has an overwhelming sense of finality to it. Still lovely but extremely depressing. Here's a good passage to explain what I am trying to say:
"For several weeks now I have had the sense of something about to come to an end-that old September feeling, left over from school days, of summer passing, vacation nearly done, obligations gathering, books and football in the air. But different now. Then, durin...more
"For several weeks now I have had the sense of something about to come to an end-that old September feeling, left over from school days, of summer passing, vacation nearly done, obligations gathering, books and football in the air. But different now. Then, durin...more































