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To the list of great American child narrators that includes Huck Finn and Scout Finch, let us now add Reuben "Rube" Land, the asthmatic 11-year-old boy at the centre of Leif Enger's remarkable first novel, Peace Like a River. Rube recalls the events of his childhood, small-town Minnesota circa 1962, in a voice that perfectly captures the poetic verbal stoicism of the Northern Great Plains. "Here's what I saw," Rube warns his readers. "Here's how it went. Make of it what you will." And Rube sees plenty. In the winter of his 11th year, two schoolyard bullies break into the Land house, and Rube's big brother Davy guns them down with a Winchester. Shortly after his arrest Davy breaks out of jail and goes on the lam. Swede is Rube's younger sister, a precocious writer who crafts rhymed epics of romantic Western outlawry. Shortly after Davy's escape, Rube, Swede and their father, a widowed school custodian, hit the road too, swerving this way and that across Minnesota and North Dakota, determined to find their lost outlaw Davy. In the end it's not Rube who haunts the reader's imagination, it's his father, torn between love for his outlaw son and the duty to do the right, honest thing. Enger finds something quietly heroic in the bred-in-the-bone Minnesota decency of America's heartland. Peace Like A River opens up a new chapter in Midwestern literature. --Claire Dederer, Amazon.com
To the list of great American child narrators that includes Huck Finn and Scout Finch, let us now add Reuben "Rube" Land, the asthmatic 11-year-old boy at the center of Leif Enger's remarkable first novel, Peace Like a River. Rube recalls the events of his childhood, in small-town Minnesota circa 1962, in a voice that perfectly captures the poetic, verbal stoicism of the northern Great Plains. "Here's what I saw," Rube warns his readers. "Here's how it went. Make of it what you will." And Rube sees plenty. In the winter of his 11th year, two schoolyard bullies break into the Lands' house, and Rube's big brother Davy guns them down with a Winchester. Shortly after his arrest, Davy breaks out of jail and goes on the lam. Swede is Rube's younger sister, a precocious writer who crafts rhymed epics of romantic Western outlawry. Shortly after Davy's escape, Rube, Swede, and their father, a widowed school custodian, hit the road too, swerving this way and that across Minnesota and North Dakota, determined to find their lost outlaw Davy. In the end it's not Rube who haunts the reader's imagination, it's his father, torn between love for his outlaw son and the duty to do the right, honest thing. Enger finds something quietly heroic in the bred-in-the-bone Minnesota decency of America's heartland. Peace Like a River opens up a new chapter in Midwestern literature. --Claire Dederer
Die Suche nach dem Verlorenen Sohn - anrührend u. fesselndZugegeben, dieses Buch war wieder einer meiner Schnellkäufe auf dem Bahnhof, aber das Thema dieses Buches macht mich neugierig: Vater, jüngerer Sohn und seine Schwester machen sich auf eine epische Reise durch den mittleren Westen der USA, um den älteren Bruder zu suchen, der des doppelten Mordes angeklagt ist und dann entflohen ist. Aber ausschlaggebend für den Kauf war das Lob des San Francisco Chronicle auf dem Klappentext: "A book that serves as a reminder of why we read fiction to begin with: to commune with a vividly, lovingly rendered world, to lose ourselves in story an language and beauty, to savor what we don't want to end". Diesem Urteil kann ich mich nur anschließen. Durch den sehr persönlichen Erzählstil (die Geschichte wird in Ich-Form vom jüngeren Sohn erzählt) wird der Leser von Anfang an in die Geschichte hineingezogen und fühlt sich immer wieder angesprochen. Die Charaktere werden sorgfältig und liebevoll ausgearbeitet, insbesondere die zentralen Figuren Reuben, sein Vater und seine Schwester. Davy, der ältere Bruder, blieb meiner Meinung nach etwas farblos. Die Geschichte selber entwickelt sich anfangs eher beschaulich, was für mich anfangs etwas gewöhnungsbedürftig war, aber steigert sich zu einem dramatischen Finale mit einem ungewöhnlichen Ende. Lediglich von der "epischen Reise" hatte ich mehr Einblicke in den mittleren Westen erwartet.Aber das Fazit ist durchaus positiv: in diesem Buch wird eine liebenswert gestaltete Welt, lebendige Charaktere und eine interessante Story präsentiert, so dass ich am Ende das Buch wirklich ungern aus der Hand legte.
Brockhaus-1911: Orange River Colony · Pelly River · Platte River · White River · Miami River · Minnesota River · Saint Mary's River · Snake River · Swan River · Red River · Rock River · Ruperts River · Humboldt River · Black River · Canadian River · Cape Fear River · Back River · Big Black River · Big Horn River · Fall River · Flint River · Green River · Clarke's River · Croton River · East River · Justice of the Peace
Herder-1854: Red River · Grand River
Meyers-1905: Peace River · Enger · Copper River · Coppermine River · Clinch River · Connecticut River · Detroit River · English River · Escambĭa River · East River · Fall River · Cape Fear River · Bear River · Big Black River · Batavia River · Altemaha River · Back River · Big Blue River · Calumet River · Canadian River · Black Warrior River · Big Horn River · Black River · Justice of the peace