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In the Fall: A Novel
 
 

In the Fall: A Novel (Paperback)

by Jeffrey Lent (Author) "THE BOY'S GRANDFATHER came down off the hill farm above the Bethel road south of Randolph early in the summer of 1862, leaving behind his..." (more)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Midway through Jeffrey Lent's turbulent and lyrical first novel, a wayward son indulges a sobering reflection. "Mostly, people are cruel, given the chance," Jamie Pelham observes, not only assuaging his own disappointments but also affirming the intransigence of deed and memory--and prejudice. In the Fall is freighted with such moments, as a postbellum Yankee family strives to fathom its past in order to clarify its present. What they find, as Lent's tale ambles over three generations, is the danger of probing too deeply.

When 17-year-old Norman Pelham departs his father's Vermont farm to join the Union army, he can little anticipate the incredulity and scorn that his return--accompanied by his former-slave bride--will elicit. The newlyweds make a go of country life, Leah's industry wins the locals' begrudging respect, and the two transact a fidelity that only rarely acknowledges their racial dissimilarities. Leah, however, who fled her native North Carolina after lashing out violently against a lifetime of abuse, believes an inescapable retribution stalks her. And so, beset with guilt and anxious to confront her own past, she briefly leaves Norman and their three children, throwing all five lives into disarray. Her desperation eventually reemerges in her youngest child, the volatile Jamie, who abandons farm life for bootlegging and rash romance. When his own ruthlessness undoes him, it falls to his son, Foster, to uncover the lingering mystery of Leah's life and death, as well as the obstinate racism that has stalked the Pelhams.

Throughout its pages, In the Fall suggests that identity consists of an undeniable duality--that although we can make of ourselves what we will, we can never completely efface what made us. Foster, upon returning to the farm his father had left years before, understands that it is "a world he was not even sure he wanted part of, and yet a part of it belonged to him by the simple fact of his existence." Unlike his grandmother, though, who found only a disillusioning misery in self-discovery, or his father, who simply shirked the quest, Foster is confident of redemption. Despite a few prolonged episodes and an occasionally portentous dialogue, Jeffrey Lent's debut is admirable, a sobering and painstaking chronicle of the persistence of tragedy and the irrefutability of hope. --Ben Guterson --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

The immediacy of the past, the tensions of race, the crushing weight of guilt and the searing intensity of forbidden love drive Lent's expansive, richly detailed and expertly plotted debut novel. Spanning three generations, from the end of the Civil War through Prohibition, the story begins with an interracial marriage between a Vermont soldier and a runaway slave girl. Nineteen-year-old Norman Pelham is wounded and dying in the woods of Virginia near the end of the war when 16-year-old Leah finds and saves him. She has fled Sweetboro, N.C., after killing her owner's sonAher own half brotherAwhen he tried to rape her. Norman and Leah know better than to allow their initial attraction to flower into love, but they cannot ignore their passion, and they marry on the road to Vermont. In brisk, confident detail, Lent recreates many historical scenesAsoldiers returning wearily home, cider-pressing time in Vermont, the ins and outs of bootlegging and whiskey-running in the resort mountains of New Hampshire in the '20s. The male charactersANorman, his son and youngest child, Jamie, and Jamie's son, FosterAprovide the narrative thread for the novel; but it is Leah whose story thematically unites the lives of husband, son, and grandson. Twenty-five years after her flight, Leah finds that she cannot continue to put the past behind her and must go back to Sweetboro. What she discovers there, and never reveals to her husband or to either of her grown daughters, is a mystery until her grandson Foster finally makes his own trip south. Lent's prose is sometimes lyrical to a fault, but otherwise remarkable for its grace, felicity and precision. Engrossing, wonderfully written, with a full gallery of believable and sympathetic characters, this first novel introduces an ambitious and talented writer. Agent, Kim Witherspoon. BOMC main selection; QPB selection; paperback rights to Vintage; foreign rights sold in the U.K., Germany, France, Italy, Holland, Sweden and Greece. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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"THE BOY'S GRANDFATHER came down off the hill farm above the Bethel road south of Randolph early in the summer of 1862, leaving behind his mother and the youngest girl still at home along with a dwindling flock of Merino sheep and a slowly building herd of " Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Seasons in our lives, unspoken emotions of generations, Feb 25 2004
By "reginamom" (Snellville, GA USA) - See all my reviews
Jeffery Lent is a stroke of genius in his detailed depth of his characters emotions. The story is developed around several autumns (falls) over multiple generations. Issues of love, hate, good and evil are dramatised over the echos of the civil war. Interestingly the unspoken thoughts of the stories average family members - especially when in the parental role is unique and easily identified by parents in today's world.

One wonders if the title In the Fall is reference to the time of autumn or the "fall" we experience when we emotionally expect for one thing in life to happen and we "fall" - something else is the outcome? When northern raised Norman returns from the south after the civil war with a young negro "wife", Leah, in tow- is his abolishonist mother's sudden departure from the homestead a "fall" of her own expectations? Was the telling of a long held fantasy as a personal reality by the "fallen from perfect health", bitter at the south's falling, Mr Lex 25 years later to Leah a "falling of her own mother" she could not endure, so she also "falls"?
This book requires somber reading. The story is beautiful in it's telling of man's relationships - unspoken thoughts that lead us down the road of life from summer into fall. Baby boomers will love this one!

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2.0 out of 5 stars Language Tedious, Dec 15 2003
By A Customer
I love long, lanquid sentences, even indulgent ones if they describe a world or thoughts that are new to me. However, this is probably one of the most tedious books I have ever read, and I read fiction for a living. I picked up this book after reading interviews with several prominent (male) southern authors who said that Lent should be read by all. However, his prose is so affected that I wanted to scream. Please, God, find a subject and a verb now and again. The CONSTANT fragments ruined the rhythm of the writing and were so jarring that I almost became angrily frustrated as a reader. Lent is no Faulkner, and he would do good to find his own voice.
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4.0 out of 5 stars I happen to like the writing style, Nov 26 2003
By Romantic Anna (Bronx, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This book is incredibly descriptive and verbose, but I like that style most of the time. I felt deeply compelled to keep reading this interesting family saga but was very disappointed by the last section where Foster goes to learn the truth behind the mystery of his grandmother's life. It falls flat and is just disturbing but not truthful sounding. What I liked best was the story of the love between Leah and Norman and the parts where Foster grows to know his 2 Aunts, who are the best characters inthe book. Much of the praise for this book is about the language and the depth of the story but I have to agree with some who criticize and say it often feels contrived. Still, I feel Mr. Lent did a fine job and has great promise.
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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Logorrhea mars ultimate success
Mr. Lent's excessive, even self-indulgent, wordiness mars what is otherwise an extraordinary story, well-told. Read more
Published on Sep 2 2003

2.0 out of 5 stars THE WORST BOOK I EVER FINISHED
I was lured by the great cover, & stellar reviews, but this book, as another reviewer said, is so derivative, not only of Faulkner but especially Cormac McCarthy. Read more
Published on Aug 4 2003 by eric8099

3.0 out of 5 stars Too long but had good bones!
I agree with several other reviewers who found this book much too long and overwritten. Some of the rambling thoughts, often very deep for the types of characters thinking such... Read more
Published on Dec 14 2002 by BeachReader

1.0 out of 5 stars I wanted to stop...
I am a member of an online book club and this was a November selection. I kept reading even though I wanted to stop because the book club usually picks such excellent books. Read more
Published on Nov 13 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Lyrical and stunningly poignant
This was a treasure, a surprise, a book that joins the ranks of my top ten favorite books. I didn't want it to end, I was so enamored with the characters and the story. Read more
Published on Nov 6 2002

2.0 out of 5 stars Overwritten So Not Believable
One of the worst things one can say about a book is: "It was too long." This book could and should have been shorter and what should have been left out was obvious. Read more
Published on Oct 27 2002 by Richard A. Mitchell

5.0 out of 5 stars Went to Jeffrey's reading in VT
Listening to Jeffrey read from his novel, watching his face as he read inspired you to read on. His second novel was being reviewed as he spoke to us. Read more
Published on Oct 19 2002 by S. Wagner

3.0 out of 5 stars Labor of Love?
When I started reading this book, I found myself struggling with it. I thought the characters two dimensional, unexamined. Read more
Published on Aug 13 2002 by B. Clothier

2.0 out of 5 stars derivative
I found this book relentlessly echoing Faulkner's prose -- the broken sentences, omitted subjects, use of participles instead of active verbs -- but without Faulkner's love and... Read more
Published on Jun 20 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and Majestic
Jeffrey Lent is truly a fresh voice in American literature. I enjoy his sweeping, descriptive prose and the depth of his characters. Very satisfying. Read more
Published on May 26 2002 by elyseb

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