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Now in November di Josephine W. Johnson
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Now in November (originale 1934; edizione 1993)

di Josephine W. Johnson (Autore), Nancy Hoffman (Postfazione)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
2951489,182 (3.44)55
"Published when Josephine Johnson was only twenty-four years old, Now in November made Johnson the youngest ever winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1935. It is a beautifully told account of one farming family's challenges to scrape by and earn a living from mortgaged land over the course of a single year, narrated by one of three sisters-the introspective and thoughtful Margaret. As the household is ravaged by Depression-era hardship and the environmental blights of the Dust Bowl, the family's unique vulnerabilities are pushed to a breaking point. In a style typical of Johnson's body of work, Now in November is strikingly ahead of its time, grappling with questions of mental health, worker's rights, as well as gender, race, and class and is ready to be rediscovered by a new generation of readers:--… (altro)
Utente:burritapal
Titolo:Now in November
Autori:Josephine W. Johnson (Autore)
Altri autori:Nancy Hoffman (Postfazione)
Info:The Feminist Press at CUNY (1993), Edition: Reprint, 288 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca, In lettura
Voto:****
Etichette:Nessuno

Informazioni sull'opera

Ora che è novembre di Josephine W. Johnson (1934)

Aggiunto di recente dabiblioteca privata, waelput, peterdj, teenybeanie25, sue17, unsurefooted, chloe.ct, HansonLibrary, georgebexley
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» Vedi le 55 citazioni

There is a lot of dust. A huge amount of dust. And more dust. ( )
  MichaelH85 | Jan 23, 2024 |
This relatively short, exquisitely crafted novel set on a failing farm in the Great Depression won the Pulitzer Prize several years before Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath tackled the same subject in more epic fashion with the same result. Johnson's novel is both more intense and less melodramatic; it has no "sweep", but rather penetrates deep into the hearts and psyches of a farm family in an unspecified part of the drought stricken mid-West as they toil through year after unprofitable year, making no headway against their mortgage debt. Even as they watch their neighbors pack up and move on...somewhere...there is never a suggestion that the Haldmarne family will think about giving in. Next year...next year will surely be better. The prose is full of evocative poetic nuggets-- "The wild cherries were in bloom. It was hot still, and ink-blotter clouds messed up the sky but brought no rain. The spring green was like green sunlight or green fire--something, anyway, more lovely than just leaves..."--but not always pretty ones--"The wires lay down across the field with the charred posts left at intervals like burned crows caught between the barbs." As others have pointed out in several excellent on-site reviews of this novel, it is incredible to contemplate that it was written by a 24-year-old woman, and despite the enthusiasm of its contemporary reception, including that Pulitzer Prize, it has now become a work that needs to be sought after, unlike the GAN that seems to have completely overshadowed it. My recommendation: Find it. Read it. Weep. ( )
  laytonwoman3rd | Nov 2, 2022 |
A farming family struggles with poverty, mental illness, drought, and tragedy in a heartbreaking story told with extreme insight into the human spirit. What a beautifully-told story! ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
[b:Now in November|267115|Now in November|Josephine Winslow Johnson|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1390983337l/267115._SY75_.jpg|258987] is [a:Josephine Winslow Johnson|736298|Josephine Winslow Johnson|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1371513942p2/736298.jpg]’s novel of a depression era farming family, caught up in the everyday hardness of the farm and the growing darkness of a world in financial crisis. The drought that overtakes Marget and her family, is more than a drought of the land, it is a drought of the soul.

The interpersonal relationships described by Marget are those of people caught in an eddy that drags them deeper and deeper into themselves and separates them further and further from one another. There is a genuine sense of desperation in each of the three daughters, Kerrin, Marget, and Merle, and there is a shadow of unavoidable failure that encompasses the father, who must try to keep a farm alive in the absence of sons.

although I was quick to hate him when he would turn on us suddenly and shout out, “eat your dinner, you girls, stop messing with your food!” But all the time I would feel us there on his shoulders, heavy as stone on his mind--all four of our lives to carry everywhere. And no money.

While the book is about the depression and the struggle to survive against nature and obligation, it is also about what it is to love, or at least to seek love, hopelessly.

Hate is always easier to speak of than love. How can I make love go through the sieve of words and come out something besides a pulp?

It is about how to survive, or at least how to keep moving forward, against a headwind that never diminishes.

I was afraid though and prayed--Lord make me satisfied with small things. Make me content to live on the outside of life. God make me love the rind!

Finally, it is about loss, looking back, finding that the days you thought hard were the closest you would get to days of joy and lightness.

Once I thought there were words for all things except love and intolerable beauty. Now I know that there is a third thing beyond expression--the sense of loss. There are no words for death.

When you put this book into the perspective of being the debut work of a 24 year old writer and then consider that it won the Pulitzer Prize for 1935, you realize just how remarkable a work of fiction it truly is. I felt akin to these people and wrapped up in their travails and their fates, and a bit hopeless in the face of their sorrows. ( )
1 vota mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
Story written in 1934 by Josephine Johnson and winner of the Pulitzer (first novel). It tells the story of 4 daughters and their parents living on a farm heavily mortgaged during the Depression and the Dust Bowl. I think it can be impressed upon the reader how momentous it is that it won a Pulitzer. While she is not the first woman to win the Pulitzer it is still an accomplishment to win with a panel of all male reviewers. The prose is beautiful in its descriptions of nature as well as the exploration of the internal life and thoughts of the narrator as she ponders love unrequited, death, and other struggles.

The start off, sets the stage for the book, "It’s a queer experience for a man to go through, to work years for security and peace, and then in a few months’ time have it all dissolve into nothing; to feel the strange blankness and dark of being neither wanted nor necessary any more. Things had come slow to him and gone fast, and it made him suspicious even of the land."

There are many great lines. Here is another example; "Lord make me satisfied with small things. Make me content to live on the outside of life. God make me love the rind."

It was a bit hard to engage with the book but I think it is more about the beautiful almost poetic writing that makes you not want to go to fast. To savor the words. To picture them. ( )
  Kristelh | May 27, 2021 |
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"Published when Josephine Johnson was only twenty-four years old, Now in November made Johnson the youngest ever winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1935. It is a beautifully told account of one farming family's challenges to scrape by and earn a living from mortgaged land over the course of a single year, narrated by one of three sisters-the introspective and thoughtful Margaret. As the household is ravaged by Depression-era hardship and the environmental blights of the Dust Bowl, the family's unique vulnerabilities are pushed to a breaking point. In a style typical of Johnson's body of work, Now in November is strikingly ahead of its time, grappling with questions of mental health, worker's rights, as well as gender, race, and class and is ready to be rediscovered by a new generation of readers:--

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