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Paperback Ludlow Book

ISBN: 1597094722

ISBN13: 9781597094726

Ludlow

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Book Overview

Language and landscape come alive in this remarkably colorful story of immigrants in southern Colorado. Among them are Greeks, Italians, Mexicans, Scots. Their struggle to survive is personal, yet they are caught up in larger events of American history in the second decade of the twentieth century, leading to the defining moment of the Ludlow Massacre in April 1914. David Mason's novel also steps back from the story, questioning whether we can know...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Life and Death in Colorado Coal Mining Country

This book is set in southern Colorado early in the twentieth century, but it's not about cowboys -- it's about coal miners. Thousands of immigrants, mostly from Japan and southern Europe, labored in virtual slavery. The mine owners held absolute power, and the lives of the miners were cheaper than the lives of mules. David Mason tells the story of the miners' fight for survival, culminating in the massacre of dozens of miners and their relatives by the Colorado National Guard in 1914. The accounts of confrontation and conflict between the miners and the militia are gripping, but perhaps the most remarkable trait of the book is the expertise with which Mason creates characters and breathes life into them. Luisa Mole is a servant girl who straddles the worlds of the mine operators and the workers. I have read what other reviewers wrote on this site. A couple said they couldn't put the book down. I, on the other hand, had to stop reading at some places because I was overcome by emotion. It was like reading about the holocaust of World War II. Man's capacity for evil seems to be unlimited at times, and those are the times when man's capacity for good is most evident. Behind the sub-plots and true-to-life characters, Ludlow is a story of good versus evil. I don't know the difference between a verse-novel and an epic poem, but I know this is one of the year's best books.

A moving poetry epic, delving into history with the flair of modernity.

Colorado College teacher David Mason presents Ludlow: A Verse-Novel, a narrative tale told entirely in free-verse poetic format. Set in Colorado during the early 1900's, Ludlow tells of Greek, Mexican, Scottish, and Italian immigrants and their struggle to eke out a living - culminating in the horrific Ludlow Massacre of April 1914, in which elements of the Colorado National Guard killed striking miners and their family members. Ludlow follows the fictional Luisa Mole, who must choose her destiny between living among the miners and the middle-class family that adopted her, and the historical figure Louis, a Cretan immigrant who becomes a labor organizer and a Ludlow martyr. Minor characters from history, including John D. Rockefeller Jr., also play a significant role. Ludlow continues beyond the massacre, to show and America transformed by wars and social change, and paints a vivid portrait of the daily struggle to survive and prosper. A moving poetry epic, delving into history with the flair of modernity.

I Stand Corrected

This book was a sleeper for me. Although I read a good deal of contemporary poetry, until recently I had not been tempted by the experiments in long verse narrative that some very good poets have engaged in. The enterprise seemed to me a bit thankless and quixotic. However, having heard Mr. Mason read on a number of occasions and having enjoyed his poetry, I decided to give "Ludlow" a try. Well, among other things, it turned out to be a great read, and a fast one: three sittings. The story itself--based on historical events--is compelling, but there is no doubt that the spare but effective blank verse moves the narrative and gives the events a kind of tragic inevitability. The documentary atmosphere of "LudIow" reminded me at moments of the best sections of Dos Passos "U.S.A," another book that is, as they say, hard to put down. So, I stand corrected about the viability of the contemporary verse narrative. On to Brad Leithauser's "Darlington's Fall."

Utterly Mesmerized

Reviewed by: Cicily Janus Posted courtesy of the Outsider Writers Book Blog For 48 hours of my life, I was utterly mesmerized into another time and place with this magnum opus of prose. From the minute I opened this novel, written completely in verse, I could literally not put it down. It was almost as if there was a cast of thousands of miners working against my ordinary life, calling at me to keep reading, keep reading.... Or maybe it was just Luisa Mole, Louis Tika, or Too Tall MacIntosh, the MC's of the book calling out to me. Their haunting lives leapt out of the pages and into my heart. Although I could not identify with them in the most basic sense of the word, I could surely feel the sympathy for their trials in life. Stunned from page one, incarcerated by his words by page 17, David ominously begins his empathetic look at the miners' life at the time of the Ludlow massacre. Not only is the opening passage particularly powerful and ominous to the rest of the book, but it is acutely relevant to the recent tragedy involving all of the mining families in the U.S. This portrait is so evocative, that I can only imagine that it was what was in the mind's eye of all of those who suffered in those last moments. David Mason poignantly looks at this tragic piece of American history and Colorado history in a fictional light and makes beautiful, heartrending poetry out of it. He blends the melting pot of the time into a stew of stories and catastrophes, turning the reader into a believer of the power of verse only to end it with: I can only dream that maybe this is how David pieced his masterpiece together, with scraps of imaginings and songs, wafting down the peak through his window while he dreamt at night in the cool Colorado air. My hat goes off to David, and I pray that he produces a hundred more of these in my lifetime, as the world needs these stunning words as sustenance for the soul.

Storytelling with a social conscience

I've been waiting for David Mason's "Ludlow" for three or four years now, ever since I read an earlier draft of it in manuscript. As I recall, the poem was not completed then, but there was enough to win me over and make me hungry for more. It is no small feat to compress the elements of a good novel into a readable and enjoyable poem. Mason's craft shimmers, and his characters will, in the end, seem more alive than many living people you know. The story is heartbreaking in its misery and government stupidity (makes this book a timely read!). Hardworking people are ground to dust by the machinery of greed. This is not a story from which you'll emerge singing and dancing, but you will come out with a more powerful and focused social conscience. Your heart will open, too, and your ever-burning spiritual flame will flare up. Give this book to friends and acquaintances. David Mason is a major American poet. He's a poet of depth and compassion. He's the real thing. --Robert McDowell, author of the forthcoming Poetry In Spiritual Practice
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