Don't forget to bookmark this web site !!
Used & Out of Print Books | Contact us | Home

Browse and Compare Price at 40+ Sites and 20,000+ Stores!!

|  FAQ/About us |  Recommend us |  Browse |  Memo |  Book Reviews |  Random Quotes |  Help |

 

Find more info., search and price compare for
Kangaroo Hollow
by Thomas Hal Phillips
Binding: Paperback, 317 pages
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
List Price: USD $25.00
Weight: 74
Dimension: H: 0.75 x L: 7.66 x W: 0.49 inches
ISBN 10: 1578062608
ISBN 13: 9781578062607
Click here to search for this book and compare price at 40+ bookstores with AddALL.com!

If you cannot find this book in our new and in print search, be sure to try our used and out of print search too!

 

Book Description:
The first American edition of the novel that has been praised as Phillips's most ambitious work In most of his books Thomas Hal Phillips narrates family chronicles charged by human foibles and generational conflicts. In Kangaroo Hollow he is at his best. Just as America enters World War I, Rufus Frost, a sharecropper in Kangaroo Hollow, marries Anna Shannon, a local aristocrat. On the night their first son is born, Rufus is with another woman, who later bears a child Rufus never acknowledges as his own. Rufus is drafted but survives the war. Returning to Kangaroo Hollow, he is elected sheriff but yields to corruption. Rex and Bayard, his and Anna's sons, mature and become bitter adversaries. Such intricacies of plot and complexities of character led critics to see this novel as Phillips's most ambitious work. Because it was published in England in 1954 (W. Allen), it was not widely reviewed in the United States. In this new edition Kangaroo Hollow reaches out to a new generation of readers. In praise of Kangaroo Hollow, the critic Louis Dollarhide wrote that Rufus is 'a striking, full bodied figure of a man . . . composed of the good and evil, the strength and weakness common to all mankind. . . . To avoid dependence on his wife, he turns political opportunist. But the book is also the story of his sons of Rex, the glittering oldest son, who finally kills his chances in politics by taking an unpopular stand; of Bayard, musician and writer, who finds himself in his work; and of Dean, the illegitimate son whom Rufus can never own. His story, like that of Ishmael, runs like a melancholy counterpoint.' As in Phillips's other books, the locale is the north Mississippi hill country, whose terrains, like Faulkner's, are populated by characters struggling against small town restrictions and against the barriers of class and race. Phillips's themes, like those of Greek tragedies, brim with hopes crushed by fate and human weaknesses. Thomas Hal Phillips, a prize winning novelist who has achieved success as a screenwriter working with Robert Altman on several acclaimed films, lives in Kossuth, Mississippi. In 1998 the University Press of Mississippi reprinted his The Loved and the Unloved (A Banner Book). His other novels include The Bitterweed Path (1950), The Golden Lie (1951), and Search for a Hero (1952).


|  Home |  FAQ/About us |  Link to us |  Recommend us |  Contact us |  Bookstores |  Memo |

Shipping Destination:
State:
(US only)
Display in:
Search by:

Searching for Out of Print Books? [Click Here]

[ For web hosting, AddALL recommend Liquidweb]