Immagine dell'autore.

Howard Frank Mosher (1942–2017)

Autore di A Stranger in the Kingdom: A Novel

17+ opere 1,806 membri 64 recensioni 8 preferito

Sull'Autore

Howard Frank Mosher was born in Kingston, New York on June 2, 1942. He received a bachelor's degree from Syracuse University and a master's degree from the University of Vermont. He taught high school English in a region in rural Vermont called the Northeast Kingdom. He wrote several books about mostra altro the area including North Country: A Personal Journey, God's Kingdom, and Points North. Many of his books were adapted into films including Where the Rivers Flow, A Stranger in the Kingdom, Disappearances, and Northern Borders. He died from lung cancer on January 29, 2017 at the age of 74. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Howard Frank Mosher, from his website. By Source (WP:NFCC#4), Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=56472264

Opere di Howard Frank Mosher

Opere correlate

The New Great American Writers' Cookbook (2003) — Collaboratore — 21 copie
Contemporary Vermont Fiction: An Anthology (2014) — Collaboratore — 5 copie

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Quirky read about a cross country book tour in the author's rattle trap old car. Mixed throughout are stories from his first year living and teaching in the Northern Kingdom of Vermont.

I liked his style and am looking forward to reading Mosher's fiction.
 
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hmonkeyreads | 8 altre recensioni | Jan 25, 2024 |
Quirky novel set in N. Vermont. OK
 
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kslade | 11 altre recensioni | Dec 8, 2022 |
A bit of a slow starter, but a good immersive story of life in 1952 in a tiny rural Vermont village with a long and slightly odd history that continues to influence events down the centuries. As if "the Kingdom's" own long-held mythologies and secrets were not enough to keep the common pot simmering, not one, but three strangers come to town, adding unfamiliar seasonings and more than a dash of spice. A particularly brutal murder, a bigoted sheriff, a self-assured Black clergyman and a variety of upstanding but unpleasant citizens raise the temperature until the stew is boiling over in a big way. Thirteen-year-old James Kinneson watches it all, and interprets what he sees with help from the dissimilar but complementary perspectives of his mother, his father and his adult brother Atty. Charlie Kinneson. Father and elder son do not see eye-to-eye, and have established a method of communicating with each other only through James, even while face to face. One can make comparisons to Faulkner (miscegenation, ancient grudges, the past is never dead!), Wendell Berry (rural life is better for people but human nature is the same everywhere), Harper Lee (a black man accused of molesting--then murdering--a white girl) and even Norman Maclean (fly-fishing as religion), but Mosher's story-telling style is not convoluted, nostalgic or particularly philosophical. It's just downright compelling. Initially my enjoyment of this novel was hampered by its physical form---it's long, and the type in my copy is not as crisp as it ought to be, and is cramped onto large pages with very little white space. I found I couldn't--my eyes couldn't--stick with it for long at a stretch. But I persisted, and at some point realized I didn't care anymore--I simply had to keep reading.… (altro)
 
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laytonwoman3rd | 5 altre recensioni | Aug 26, 2022 |
I just couldn't stick with this. The circumstances and the characters that the main character encounters along the way were just surreal to the point of silliness. I saw no point to the surrealism.
 
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MarkLacy | 8 altre recensioni | May 29, 2022 |

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Statistiche

Opere
17
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
1,806
Popolarità
#14,252
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
64
ISBN
75
Lingue
1
Preferito da
8

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