Ella Leffland
Auteur de Rumors of Peace
A propos de l'auteur
Œuvres de Ella Leffland
Last Courtesies {short story} 1 exemplaire
Leffland, Ella Archive 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
West Coast Fiction: Modern Writing from California, Oregon, and Washington (1979) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 1931-11-25
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- USA
- Lieu de naissance
- Martinez, California, USA
- Lieux de résidence
- Martinez, California, USA
San Francisco, California, USA - Études
- San Jose State University
- Prix et distinctions
- O. Henry Award (1974)
Membres
Critiques
Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 8
- Aussi par
- 2
- Membres
- 363
- Popularité
- #66,173
- Évaluation
- 3.7
- Critiques
- 5
- ISBN
- 22
I picked up a copy of Ella Leffland’s Rumors of Peace on a stoop here in Brooklyn one afternoon last summer, read “coming-of-age story” on the back cover, and thought it might make for a good little read for my daughter. This summer, I decided to first read it myself so as not to waste my daughter’s time if the book turned out to be some silly kind of YA Fiction.
A waste of time? Nothing could be further from the truth! If the name of Ella Leffland wasn’t already as well-known to me as that of Carson McCullers, Flannery O’Connor or Joyce Carol Oates, I consider that to be my failing.
Ms. Leffland’s prose is immaculate – and her character, Helen Maria (not the protagonist, Suze, but rather the protagonist’s older sister), has to rank right up there alongside Uriah Heep, Frankie Addams, Atticus Finch, Captain Ahab, and Don Quixote for being (to me at least) among the most colorful and memorable in literature.
At the same time, I found Ms. Leffland’s use of headlines (about the progress of WWII) as a literary device to be every bit as effective as John Dos Passos’s use of Newsreels in his U. S. A. Trilogy.
If I’ve always considered Carson McCullers’s Member of the Wedding to be the most accomplished coming-of-age story in American literature – and on a par with Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield and Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones in British literature – I now have to say that Ella Leffland’s Rumors of Peace figures right alongside it. Yes, it’s that good!
One of the more impressive aspects of Rumors of Peace is Ms. Leffland’s ability to show, in both thought and action, Suze’s growth – and to illustrate that growth in perfect syncopation with world events right up to and including the dropping of the A-Bomb on Hiroshima. While I realize that this is the objective of any coming-of-age story worth its salt – or at least its ink – I can’t recall ever having seen it done so effectively.
In any case, I have to wonder in this, the year 2014 (and beyond): will anyone still possess comparable powers of observation for things both near and far? In this, the year 2014 (and beyond), with most people – whether on foot or in some other mode of transportation – plugged in digitally, will anyone still be able to observe and describe the world beyond his or her own digital navel?
Somehow, I doubt it.
RRB
07/28/14
Brooklyn, NY
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