Gilead by Marilynne Robinson

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: January 2006
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 3,350

Reader Rating: (70 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2006
    • Publisher: Picador USA
    • Format: Paperback, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 3,350

    Synopsis

    In 1956, toward the end of Reverend John Ames's life, he begins a letter to his young son, a kind of last testament to his remarkable forebears. Reverend Ames writes to his son about the tension between his father - an ardent pacifist - and his grandfather who came west to Kansas to fight for abolition and 'preached men into the Civil War'. And he tells the story of the sacred bonds between fathers and sons, which are tested in his tender and strained relationship with his namesake, John Ames Boughton, his best friends wayward son. This is also the tale of a remarkable vision of life as a wonderously strange creation. It tells how wisdom was forged in Ames's soul during his solitary life and how history lives through generations.

    Annotation

    Winner of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

    Winner of the 2004 National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction

    The New York Times - James Wood

    Gilead is a beautiful work -- demanding, grave and lucid -- and is, if anything, more out of time than Robinson's book of essays, suffused as it is with a Protestant bareness that sometimes recalls George Herbert (who is alluded to several times, along with John Donne) and sometimes the American religious spirit that produced Congregationalism and 19th-century Transcendentalism and those bareback religious riders Emerson, Thoreau and Melville.

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    Biography

    Pulitzer Prize winner Marilynne Robinson writes "quiet" novels of astonishing beauty, peopled with unforgettable characters, and suffused in deeply spiritual themes like faith, atonement, and redemption.

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    Customer Reviews

    Gileadby rhyse

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    February 08, 2010: This is such a beautiful book. It is heartbreaking, funny,profound and a joy to read. It is the sort of book I want to go back to and underscore some of the words of wisdom it contains.

    Gilead is superb readingby rovemet

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    July 25, 2009: The story telling winds through the lives in such a way that you are quickly a part of the lives and the story. The prose is often poetic. One of those rare books that I will read again.


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