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A Short History of a Small Place

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

Marvelously funny, bittersweet, and beautifully evocative, the original publication of A Short History of a Small Place announced the arrival of one of our great Southern voices. Although T. R.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of my favorite American novels

"A Short History of a Small Place" is on my personal list of ten best American novels. Mr. Pearson is a Southern story-teller to the bone, interrupting himself, digressing, supplying minute detail, but always focusing on the main thread of the story, always evoking a sense of place, and always, always depicting characters whose eccentricities are both endearing and defining. I first became acquainted with Mr. Pearson and this, his first-published work, in the mid '80s when I was living in North Carolina and heard this novel read on a radio program, a medium which suited it perfectly, given Mr. Pearson's conversational style. Soon after, I read it for myself, and have since reread it in entirety and in part, enjoying it even more with each new visit.Through the eyes of young Louis Benfield, who though apparently innocent is a keen observer, the reader meets the inhabitants of Neely, NC and learns some of the history that causes them to do the things they do. The ancient Miss Pettigrew, who has never recovered from being jilted is a not-too-distant cousin to Miss Haversham. The Epperson sisters with their petition and seemingly unending quest, Louis's mother who washes dishes and stares out the window (behavior that the reader comprehends immediately, but Louis only gradually), the town Sheriff who is not as fearless as he seems to Louis, all are fully drawn portraits of endearing people. Every year, close to Christmas time, I take out "A Short History" and re-read the Christmas pageant section in which Miss Pettigrew's appearance causes such a stir that the dog (that would be the dog playing the part of the donkey in the Christmas play) knocks over a candle and nearly sets fire to the whole church. It is both uproariously funny and completely recognizable for anyone who grew up in a small place (regardless of geography) and participated in the yearly church Christmas pageant.Since "A Short History", I've eagerly awaited each of Mr. Pearson's successive novels and have enjoyed all of them;his humorous observation of human frailty remains keen. With each successive novel, he has tightened his style and honed his descriptive abilities, which is admirable, but I must admit that it was the expansive, langorous style of his first story -- a style of story-telling that took me back decades to a front porch, summer heat, and my grandmother's voice -- that I most admired and enjoyed.

An absolute masterpiece!

I first read this book many years ago, and have read it several times since. Pearson is a first-rate storyteller, a modern day Mark Twain. A Short History of a Small Place is without a doubt the funniest book I've ever read, and of the hundreds of books I've read in my adult life, it's one of my top 3 all time favorites in any genre. His descriptions are hilarious and priceless. His narrative style had me hooked from the first page, and I've been a fan ever since. His description of the townspeople's actions and reactions during an rare snowstorm is hysterical. I've read that particular passage again and again, and laughed out loud every time. I find myself often reading passages aloud to someone else, because I just have to share the sheer joy and mastery in his writing. The other two books in this trilogy -- Off for the Sweet Hereafter, and The Last of How it Was -- are also wonderful and brilliantly funny. But they are all stand-alone books. You don't need to read them in sequence. I've read all of Pearson's books, and A Short History of a Small Place remains my favorite. It's one of a kind, a thoroughly entertaining read. There's really no present day writer who can compare to T. R. Pearson. He's an original. His narrative style will sweep you in, hold you captive, and leave you wishing for more after you've turned the last page. Pearson has written a true American classic.

A Short History of a Small Place

I read this book more than 10 years ago, and I'm longing to read it again. I need to buy a new copy because I loaned out the original and haven't seen it since. My husband first read the book while he was attending summer school. Not being able to sleep in the dorm room on a hot, humid night in Minnesota, he read "A Short History" during the wee hours and found himself on the floor from laughing so hard. I found the book similarily entertaining. We often pulled it out and read parts of it to friends (It was great entertainment after dinner), especially the chapter where Pinky Throckmorton brings himself the nearest he's ever been to the seven deadly sins. The characters in this book are unforgetable. I want to read this again and delve into the world of "...and Daddy says..."

So good I'm replacing my yellowed, dog-eared coverless copy.

When my sister returned from a trip to souteast Asia she was laden with fabrics and carvings and all sorts of exotic, fabulous things. The first thing she pulled out of her bag and dropped in front of me was a beaten-up novel by a guy named T. R. Pearson. It had "Pullin Library" stamped in blue on the inside of its cover (which was still hanging on for dear life), and she'd found it on the table next to her bed at a hostel in Tibet. It had obviously been carried around and read by many travellers.Since then I've read it twice and loaned it to several others. I figure that even if it weren't in such bad shape as to be unreadable I'd still have to replace it, since all who read it laugh so hard they end up sort of snorting, which can't be too hygenic. It's a book, after all, not a Kleenex. So if you're the fussy type, get your own, don't borrow. By the time you are finished you will never be able to think of weasles again without laughing.

Hilarious and elegaic small town life in the south

Every person I've persuaded to read this book has loved it! This first of Pearson's novels introduces the reader to the unique geography created from his imagination, memory, and brilliant writing. The tone of the book is at turns hilarious, profane, heartwarming, and at times bittersweet with yearning for the vanished past. The stories told in the book, whether exotic and improbable or mundane and domestic, lace in and out of each other as characters collide, rebound, spin off in various directions and the narrator pours out an endless stream of penetrating and perceptive commentary along with the events. I had the privilege of hearing Mr. Pearson read from his more recent novel, Cry Me A River, which also should not be missed. His voice, once heard, sings in its perfect ability to convey his apparently tangled, but in fact elaborately and deliberately knotted golden fabric of fiction. If you love humor, brilliantly drawn eccentric characters, and convoluted storytelling to rival Tristram Shandy, read this book. Read sentences of it out loud to a loved one who loves to laugh. Read the whole thing yourself, laugh, feel sweet sorrow with the author for the passing of childlhood and an era, sigh.....and then go look for other Pearson novels, particularly The Last of How It Was, Off for the Sweet Hereafter, and Gospel Hour
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