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The ancient minstrel : novellas  Cover Image E-audiobook E-audiobook

The ancient minstrel : novellas

Harrison, Jim 1937-2016 (author.). Szarabajka, Keith, (narrator.). Sands, Xe, (narrator.). Bramhall, Mark, (narrator.). Harrison, Jim 1937-2016 Ancient minstrel. Spoken word. (Added Author). Harrison, Jim 1937-2016 Eggs. Spoken word. (Added Author). Harrison, Jim 1937-2016 Case of the Howling Buddhas. Spoken word. (Added Author).

Summary: New York Times bestselling author Jim Harrison is one of our most beloved and acclaimed writers, adored by both readers and critics. In The Ancient Minstrel, Harrison delivers three novellas that highlight his phenomenal range as a writer, shot through with his trademark wit and keen insight into the human condition.Harrison has tremendous fun with his own reputation in the title novella, about an aging writer in Montana who spars with his estranged wife, with whom he still shares a home; weathers the slings and arrows of literary success; and tries to cope with the sow he buys on a whim and the unplanned litter of piglets that follow soon after. In "Eggs," a Montana woman reminisces about staying in London with her grandparents and collecting eggs at their country house. Years later, having never had a child, she attempts to do so. And in "The Case of the Howling Buddhas," retired Detective Sunderson-a recurring character from Harrison's New York Times bestsellers The Great Leader and The Big Seven-is hired as a private investigator to look into a bizarre cult that achieves satori by howling along with howler monkeys at the zoo. Fresh, incisive, and endlessly entertaining, with moments of both profound wisdom and sublime humor, The Ancient Minstrel is an exceptional reminder of why Jim Harrison is one of the most cherished and important writers at work today.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781504685023
  • ISBN: 1504685024
  • ISBN: 9781504685047
  • ISBN: 1504685040
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (1 sound file (06 hr., 28 min., 56 sec.))
  • Edition: Unabridged.
  • Publisher: [Ashland, Oregon] : Blackstone Audio, 2016.

Content descriptions

Participant or Performer Note: Read by Keith Szarabajka, Xe Sands and Mark Bramhall.
Source of Description Note:
Online resource; title from title details screen (OverDrive, viewed March 10, 2016)
Subject: Short stories, American
Authors -- Fiction
Childlessness -- Fiction
Cults -- Fiction
Montana -- Fiction
Authors
Childlessness
Cults
Short stories, American
Montana
Genre: Downloadable audio books.
Audiobooks.
Audiobooks.
Fiction.

Electronic resources


  • AudioFile Reviews : AudioFile Reviews 2016 June
    Harrison, who died in March 2016, leaves a rich audio legacy, and this trio of novellas will hold a special attraction for his longtime fans. Three narrators interpret Harrison's distinctive voice and outlook, and each conveys perfectly the contrary and carefully balanced elements that make up the three central characters. The individual stories are mainly third-person narrative with little dialogue or sustained action--making the narrator's voice that much more important, and defining. Mark Bramhall has delivered previous titles of Harrison's, notably LEGENDS OF THE FALL, and he and Keith Szarabajka bring to maximum effect Harrison's randy- old-man humor and the verbal richness of his style. Xe Sands, working with a quieter and more nuanced story, captures most effectively the intricate bond between people and their livestock--chickens and, in the title story, pigs--that forms a central theme of the collection. D.A.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2016 March #1
    *Starred Review* The enduring master of numerous literary forms, Harrison delivers one of his loosest and most playful books yet. In three stylistically varying novellas, he returns to his customary subjects: Montana and the Midwest, womanizing and boozing, the writing life and rural living, aging and—facetiously—himself. The shortest and goofiest tale even revisits a familiar character, retired detective Sunderson from The Big Seven (2015) and The Great Leader (2011), whose age is catching up to his insatiable lust for younger women. Hired on to investigate a Buddhist howler-monkey cult, Sunderson wrestles with ethics while courting a teenage neighbor. In a tamer but more sprawling novella, a Montana farmhand who partially spent her youth in England during WWII recounts her passion for chickens and her vain attempts to find love or, more urgently, get pregnant. And in the delightfully digressive title story—here the most autobiographical—a writer seems to have hit an artistic wall as he turns 70, tending to some piglets to distract himself from his marital woes and the manuscript he owes his editor. The unnamed and restless narrator, like Harrison himself, refuses to allow death's imminence to keep him from living fully, embodying this witty and inspired collection. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2016 January #2
    An ascended master of the form returns to the novella, turning in three very different pieces with autobiographical elements in common. "To be honest, which often I am not," Harrison (The Big Seven, 2014, etc.) writes in a telling phrase early on, announcing good intentions while reserving the prerogatives of invention. Yet, the lead of the title story, minstrel and mongrel alike, is someone very like Harrison, challenged of eye but not of vision and a trencherman and drinker of formidable appetites and no real interest in scaling back to better fit his advancing years. The big book he has been promising his publisher is slow to emerge, just as his abilities at 70 are beginning to show their age, causing him to ponder the prospects of using performance-enhancement pills and of quitting the writerly world to raise pigs. He settles for trying to write poems instead, inconclusively; as Harrison writes, "Life is short on conclusions and that's why it's often a struggle to end a p oem." Some of Harrison's lines are throwaways, though a less accomplished writer would love to have written them; but in the main, he writes with his customary rough grace and bodhisattva wisdom, whether comically treating sexual improprieties or reflecting deeply on the meaning of life. As with Dalva, Harrison is skilled at writing from a woman's point of view, and his second story, set in Montana and across the water in England, concerns a woman, Catherine, who likes nothing better than twitting her moneyed neighbors; she, too, shares biographical points with Harrison, from a love for steak to a fondness for Key West. The closing story, "The Case of the Howling Buddhas," is a touch short for a novella and slighter than the other pieces, a Pynchon-esque goof involving one Detective Sunderson (of The Great Leader fame) who's on the trail of some bad actors inside a cult-y sangha but is never too busy not to ogle the long legs of a neighbor—trademark Harrison territory, in other words. Grand entertainments all and a pleasure. Copyright Kirkus 2016 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2015 November #1

    One of our Grand Old Writers, Harrison has a way with novellas—2014's Brown Dog: Novellas earned starred reviews and solid sales—and these pieces are classic. In the title story, a mocking self-portrait of an aging Montana writer facing down his estranged wife, the vagaries of literary success, and a surprise litter of piglets, while "The Case of the Howling Buddhas" features retired detective Sunderson, fresh from Harrison's New York Times best seller The Great Leader and The Big Seven.

    [Page 62]. (c) Copyright 2015 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2016 January #3

    Though this latest collection of novellas is one of his slimmer efforts, Harrison (Brown Dog) still has one of the most companionable voices in American letters. The first two entries in this collection revolve around animal husbandry—an aging writer in the grip of a "pig trance" and a woman's lifelong "chicken obsession." The rangy title novella tells the story of "America's best-loved geezer," a figure very much like Jim Harrison, who is looking back on his "50-year slavery to language." Restless, losing his once prodigious libido, and beset by recurring nightmares, the narrator impulsively decides to raise pigs, a late-life crisis manifested in a desire to become the "prince of free-range pork." It's a loose, low-key reminiscence that affords some amusing glimpses into the writer's psyche. In "Eggs," Catherine, a woman living by herself on a Montana farm, finds herself in thrall to a biological impulse to reproduce. Catherine is a strange, independent, and phlegmatic heroine whose story steadily accrues emotional weight as we learn about her alcoholic father, her unhinged brother, her harrowing experience in London during the Blitz, and her romance with a wounded British soldier. Harrison revives his Detective Sunderson in "The Case of the Howling Buddhas." Now retired but no less libidinous, "an old boy on the loose again," Sunderson is enlisted to look into a mountebank cult leader, though the real drama involves the detective's illegal dalliance with a 15-year-old girl. This last novella is also the weakest, the shaggy-dog mystery fitting uneasily with the salacious, and not particularly convincing, erotic plot. Agent: Steve Sheppard, Cowan, DeBaets, Abrahams & Sheppard LLC. (Mar.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2016 PWxyz LLC
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