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A Life

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Very good in very good dust jacket (prev owner's name stamped on half title page, some light edgewear to dj.) Hardcover first edition - New Harper & Row,, (1973.). Hardcover first edition -. Very good in very good dust jacket (prev owner's name stamped on half title page, some light edgewear to dj.). First printing. A continuation of the story of Warner, the 'old man' in 'Fire Sermon' who has driven his ancient Maxwell coupe from California to his childhood home in Nebraska. A deceptively simple, and almost poetic, portrait of the last hours of an old man's life. 152 pp.

152 pages, Hardcover

First published December 31, 1973

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About the author

Wright Morris

137 books35 followers
Wright Marion Morris was an American novelist, photographer, and essayist. He is known for his portrayals of the people and artifacts of the Great Plains in words and pictures, as well as for experimenting with narrative forms.
Morris won the National Book Award for The Field of Vision in 1956. His final novel, Plains Song won the American Book Award in 1981.

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5 stars
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9 (27%)
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8 (24%)
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Cody.
1,031 reviews326 followers
October 2, 2025
Do not proceed unless you have first read Fire Sermon. There’s no way this could track as anything other than solipsistic otherwise, the actuality being it is any but; Wright-Morris (I’m treating it all as a surname) earns the hell out of this slow hurt out of life. Written in a malleable third that ebbs in and out of omniscience, the protagonist from Sermon, drained of piss and vinegar, beers off into his final, unexpected anti-adventure.

Turns out that the failures of Fire Sermon functioned as the necessary prologue for A Life’s quixotic successes. All that annoys there does so to substantiate what’s ever-gladdening here, a neat literary feint you’ll just have to trust me on. If only all termini were granted such grace, however fictional they may be, I might dream today of better tomorrows.
Profile Image for Rachel Cheeseman.
29 reviews1 follower
September 1, 2017
This book is a quick and melancholic read about the twilight of life. I liked it but wouldn't recommend it. The storyline is lost in meandering and distracting prose, and I cannot seem to decipher an intention of feeling in the story until the last sentence. It's pretty though.
Profile Image for AJ Nolan.
889 reviews15 followers
March 9, 2008
Borrowed from Janet Peery. A really great novella. A powerful, contained story that takes place in 1-2 days. Read in one day (like I did its predecessor, Fire Sermon).
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews