Immagine dell'autore.

Stephen Harrigan

Autore di The Gates of the Alamo

21+ opere 1,177 membri 38 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Stephen Harrigan is the author of numerous works of nonfiction and fiction, including Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas and the critically acclaimed novels A Friend of Mr. Lincoln, Remember Ben Clayton, and The Gates of the Alamo. He is a longtime writer for Texas Monthly and an award-winning mostra altro screenwriter who has written many movies for television. mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Matt Lankes

Opere di Stephen Harrigan

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Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Harrigan, Stephen
Data di nascita
1948
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di residenza
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
Abilene, Texas, USA
Corpus Christi, Texas, USA
Austin, Texas, USA
Attività lavorative
journalist
Organizzazioni
Texas Monthly

Utenti

Recensioni

Grady McClarty, 70, is asked by the Oklahoma Historical Society for an oral account of the escape of a leopard from the Oklahoma City zoo in the 1950s. Instead McClarty writes a remeniscence, as if he were telling the story as the five year old he was when the escape took place.

Grady, his six year old brother Danny, his mother, and two uncles all lived in seperate apartments adjacent to his grandparents house. The reminiscence is not just about the wild animal's escape and the terror it caused within the city, but also about his family members attempts to put the war years and experiences behind them and learn how to continue the lives they once expected before grief, psycholgical scars, and recognition of racial injustice became part of them.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
clue | 2 altre recensioni | Mar 16, 2024 |
Very good historical fiction about seige of the Alamo. Tended to be a slow read, but also was very busy last few weeks so took forever to finish
 
Segnalato
derailer | 15 altre recensioni | Jan 25, 2024 |
On a recent trip to the nation’s capital, my son and I visited the place where Lincoln died, a boardinghouse across the street from Ford’s Theater. It’s a museum now, as you might expect, whose exhibits testify to the immense power Lincoln’s memory exerts, regardless of political belief.

Conflicting visions of his motives and character roll off the presses year after year. In fact, the museum has built a pile of books two stories high, a brave project, given that sooner or later, the historical Babel must punch through the roof. What a fitting metaphor for the man who towered above his contemporaries in more ways than one.

Consequently, it’s fair to ask, “Why another?,” even as the echo rebounds, “Why not?” But Stephen Harrigan has made a strong case with his novel about the political formation of his hero in 1830s and 1840s Illinois. However, for better and worse, the story begins just after his assassination in 1865, as the town of Springfield mourns over the coffin that has made its sad voyage from Washington. Two friends of his—one fictional, one real—talk about setting the record straight about their late friend, a task that Harrigan seems to have zealously taken up. That too, is for better and worse.

Narrating this tale is Micajah (Cage) Weatherby, a Springfield poet and businessman, the author’s brilliant creation, a man who befriends Lincoln during the Black Hawk War of 1832. As a convinced abolitionist, freer with his passions, less concerned with how things look than how they feel, he’s a perfect foil for Lincoln, who’s always looking over his shoulder to see what the electorate thinks and binds his heart to be ruled by law.

It’s not that Lincoln the politico lacks any sense of right and wrong; on the contrary, he’s got a very highly developed one. However, it’s always subservient to his belief in order and justice, which is where he thinks honor lies, and honor means everything to him.

It’s no small task to write Lincoln’s character, but Harrigan does marvelously well, I think, partly by contrast to the young lawyer’s friends, all young men on the make. But to describe A Friend of Mr. Lincoln as a character study, even of such a momentous nature, does the book injustice.

Harrigan has re-created the period and its tensions, whether over slavery, who gets what government contract, or who’s murdered whom. Everyone must take sides, which causes both personal and political animosities. Harrigan offers court cases, romances, near riots, a duel, and, most vividly, Lincoln’s stormy courtship of Mary Todd. Cage helps his friend through terrible bouts of depression and saves his life on at least two occasions, for which, one may argue, he was poorly repaid.

I dislike prologues and retrospective first chapters. I understand why Harrigan begins his story in 1865; he wants to show how the Lincolns, chiefly Mary, have thrust Cage out of their lives when once he was intimate friend to both. But that chapter is entirely unnecessary, and the “set-the-record-straight” talk is a timeworn device for telling a story. This one needs no excuses.

More seriously, I think, is Harrigan’s apparent ax to grind. He seems determined to accent the less attractive parts of Lincoln’s character, and though I like that as an antidote to the legend, I think the author may have gotten too caught up in his cause. What’s more, he often tells you what he wants you to think, when he’s more than capable of showing it. And from time to time, these statements confused me, because the story had led me to a different conclusion entirely.

Nevertheless, I like this novel. As Lincoln himself might have said, it reminds me of a story; this one’s from the museum. When one of the president’s enemies accused him of being two-faced, he replied, “If I had another face, why would I show you this one?” That’s what Stephen Harrigan has done—show Lincoln’s different face.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Novelhistorian | 2 altre recensioni | Jan 31, 2023 |
Easily read, "sweet" story whose narrator is looking back at a time when he was five years old in Oklahoma City in the 1950's. Grady and his older brother Danny live with their widowed mother but also close to their grandparents and two uncles Frank and Emmett, also survivors of WWiI.

Grady serves at the narrator of the story which is set around the escape of a leopard from the nearby zoon. People get frantic as live goes on the the city. Segregation is still in force and the boys take it as normal. Their uncles are having difficulty reentering post-war life especially in relationship with their father who owns a car dealership.

This is definitely a story about family.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
maryreinert | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 17, 2022 |

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Statistiche

Opere
21
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
1,177
Popolarità
#21,848
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
38
ISBN
83
Lingue
1

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