On Tuesday, August 21, Edinboro University's Book Discussion group will meet in the Baron-Forness Library, room 715 at 6:45 p.m. The discussion will be on Wendell Berry’s book, Hannah Coulter. Copies of the book are on reserve in the library. All are welcome to join.
"This is the story of my life, that while I lived it weighed upon me and pressed
against me and filled all my senses to overflowing and now is like a dream
dreamed.... This is my story, my giving of thanks." So begin the reflections of
Hannah Coulter, the twice-widowed protagonist of this slim, incandescent novel
in Berry's Port William series. In 1940, the precocious, innocent Hannah leaves
her small Kentucky farming town to work as a secretary in nearby Hargrave, where
she meets Virgil Feltner, seven years her senior, who gently courts her. They
marry and have a daughter, but Virgil, "called to the army in 1942," dies in the
Battle of the Bulge. Love follows mourning, as a kind but driven farmer, Nathan
Coulter, returns from combat and woos Hannah. In delicate, shimmering prose,
Berry tracks Hannah's loves and losses through the novel's first half; the
narrative sharpens as Hannah recounts her children's lives—Margaret becomes a
schoolteacher with a troubled son; Mattie ("a little too eager to climb Fool's
Hill") flees rural life to become a globe-trotting communication executive;
Caleb, Nathan's hope to run the family farm, becomes a professor of agriculture
instead. Beneath the story of ordinary lives lies the work of an extraordinarily
wise novelist: as Hannah relates her children's fate to her own deeply rooted
rural background, she weaves landscape and family and history together ("My
mind... is close to being the room of love where the absent are present, the
dead are alive, time is eternal and all creatures prosperous"). Her compassion
enlivens every page of this small, graceful novel.
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