Ebook Download , by Robert Penn Warren
Ebook Download , by Robert Penn Warren
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, by Robert Penn Warren
Ebook Download , by Robert Penn Warren
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Product details
File Size: 1273 KB
Print Length: 674 pages
Publisher: Mariner Books; First edition (September 1, 1996)
Publication Date: September 1, 1996
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B00A1TEZA6
Text-to-Speech:
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#18,443 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
This story is famously "about" Huey Long and political corruption. As it turns out, the actual novel is only partially about political corruption. Politics is mostly a framing device for the real story. The meat of the book is about how actions have consequences, and that there's no getting around that. Reporter-turned-political-staffer-type Jack Burden (it's hard to describe what it actually is he does for Willie Stark, the Huey Long analogue referenced above, and don't think for a second that surname isn't symbolic) burned out of his Ph.D. program when he uncovered a story that made the consequences of heedless actions too real, and tries to hide behind inaction to save him from having to deal with that kind of responsibility. His work for Stark means that he mostly doesn't have to make decisions, until it intersects with his personal life in a way that starts forcing him to do just that and refusing to let him slip quietly away from the results.That central conceit, though, isn't really clear until you get about halfway through with the story. The first part of the story feels very much like a standard issue dramatic story about yes, politics and corruption. We learn the story of Willie Stark, how he made it from a bumpkin, to a young political appointee fighting a shady, kickback-laden county contract, to a stooge goaded into running for Governor by people using him for their own purposes, to a morally questionable Governor himself. That part of the novel is interesting and easily digestible enough, but the real power of it comes from the later, more philosophical part that shifts Stark's story into the background and brings Jack's story up front.The storyline wrangling and plot development is masterful, but where the real beauty of this book is are the words. Robert Penn Warren won the Pulitzer Prize for this novel, but he also won one for poetry, and you can tell. Picking out a highlight quote was torture...I read this on the Kindle and digitally underlined about half the book because I was so in love with the language. It's a page turner, but not in a suspenseful kind of way. You just want to keep reading it to keep basking in the glory of the writing. I was sad to put it down when it was over.
While there is some controversy over this version of Warren's Pulitzer winner, I'm not sure the differences are great enough to cheer for one version over the other. I had this version chosen for me as a book club selection, but other than changing Stark's name to Talos, I haven't been able to discover too many meaningful differences between the two versions. The obvious reason one might choose this 'restored' version is to gain an understanding of what Warren may actually have wanted versus what his editors and publisher wanted for his book.Often referred to as America's greatest political novel, ATKM is much more than such an animal. In fact, I hardly read it that way at all. Sure, it is essentially set in the world of politics, but for me this was a story with a lot more humanity in it than I'd expected going in. I've so often heard the emphasis put on Willie Talos (Stark in the original version) that I've just assumed this was a novel about him and his fall, but it's Jack Burden who is the real story here and it's through his eyes and philosophies that Warren relates the tales. I could read Burden's dialog all day, and he's a competent philosopher whose perspectives change and grow with age and experience. Throw in the mesmerizing story within a story of Cass Mastern, and there's enough to keep a reader thinking for a long time.Reading his prose is a constant reminder that Warren was primarily a poet. He writes with a mesmerizing grace and clarity that proves beautiful and meaningful through the entire read. It is not difficult to see how this became one of America's great novels and it goes without saying that it is well worth reading. The only question is which version? That one is up to you.
First and foremost: The Kindle edition of All The King's Men is not the extended version edited by Noel Polk. If you've never read All The King's Men this is good news. If you've read it once or several times, it's still good news. This is the originally published version from 1946 - not the version that renames Willie Stark as Willie Talos.Okay, if I could take two books with me to a desert island, the first book would be All The King's Men. The second book would also be All The King's Men, in case I lost the first book. I think it's that good, but that's just my opinion and it doesn't count for much. Some people hate it; they say it's long and that it rambles and waxes poetic and has lots of philosophy in it. They're right. Some people love it for the same reasons. But there is this about it: It is full to the brim and overflowing with life. It tells a fictional story of people that lived over 75 years ago - and it could just as well be talking about people that are alive today. You will find yourself in this book and you will know yourself better if you finish it. What more can you ask?
I bought this to replace my tattered old (what we used to call regular sized) paperbacks. I first read this in college for a class when I was 18 and was enthralled. The story is about Huey Long but it's also about the story's narrator. At that time one passage I was intrigued with was the narrator's story about how there's a twitch left if a frog is killed and he reflects on the fact that "the twitch is all", concluding that he wants to be at one with the Great Twitch. I had a T-shirt made up to read "the Twitch is all". I reread this book in my 40s and loved it just as much as before - appreciating it a bit more due to having more life experience and still loved the segment about the Great Twitch. Obviously the book is about so much more - and since anyone can look up what it's about, I'm not discussing it here but I recommend it for anyone who loves a 'meat and potato' book as opposed to fluff. I plan to read it again in 2017 -it's been about 22 years since the last read so I expect it will reveal even more to me. Since there's so many books to read, I rarely read a book more than once unless I find it exceptional. It won a Pulitzer for good reason.
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