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504 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1967
Everything around me—the dark brown stretches of withered grassland where the snow had completely vanished, leaving the soil parched and powerless as yet to put forth new life, even the somber evergreen heights of the forest beyond the groves of great deciduous trees—had an air of indefinable loss, like the dead ruin of a human being, that awoke an obscure uneasiness in me as my gaze roved across the hollow.This is one of those novels where all the characters are miserable and bad things are constantly happening to each of them. Meanwhile, the text is suffused with an oppressive foreboding that even worse events and/or revelations lurk in the distance. To complicate reading matters, the first third or so of the book moves at a glacial pace, smothering everything in its slow-moving wake. I almost abandoned it after about 100 pages but then I read reviews reporting that the action picks up later on. And so I heaved the yoke back up across my shoulders and trudged on, only to be rewarded with even more suffering and misery, but at least it started arriving faster.