Product Details
Let Us Build Us a City: Eleven Lost Towns

Let Us Build Us a City: Eleven Lost Towns
By Donald Harington

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Product Description

This work brilliantly fuses travel narrative with history and cultural studies—yet reads like a novel. It’s also a love story that is in no way fictional. A fan letter to the author from a woman named Kim starts a correspondence which details research she’s conducting in one-horse towns throughout Arkansas.In the years of rural decline many of these towns dwindled to church, post office, general store, gas station, and a few rundown houses—but every house has a porch, every porch a rocker, and every rocker an old man or woman with a story.Kim and Don agree to collaborate on a book—this one—creating a unique and enchanting work about towns that will never again be their old selves and towns that never fulfilled the brave dreams of their founders. And at the end of the adventure the author and Kim meet, having learned something of expectation and hope—and love. With photos and maps.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #58799 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2011-11-29
  • Released on: 2011-11-29
  • Format: Kindle eBook
  • Number of items: 1

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Although he was born and raised in Little Rock, Donald Harington spent nearly all of his early summers in the Ozark mountain hamlet of Drakes Creek, his mother's hometown, where his grandparents operated the general store and post office. There, before he lost his hearing to meningitis at the age of twelve, he listened carefully to the vanishing Ozark folk language and the old tales told by story-tellers. His academic career is in art and art history and he has taught art history at a variety of colleges, including his alma mater, the University of Arkansas. Acclaimed by critics as “an undiscovered continent” and “America’s greatest unknown novelist” Harington is a brilliant creator of fictional worlds rooted in his native Arkansas and his language is rich in a uniquely American, southern idiom. Winner of the Robert Penn Warren Award, the Porter Prize, the Heasley Prize, and in 2006 the first Oxford America Lifetime Achievement Award for contributions to Southern Literature.