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The Whisper of the River

par Ferrol Sams

Séries: Porter Osborne Jr. (2)

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385566,010 (4.3)15
Porter Osborne Jr. leaves home for Willingham University. Neither would ever be the same again.
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» Voir aussi les 15 mentions

5 sur 5
What a super book! Sams evokes pre-WW2 rural Georgia in a way that reminds me of Faulkner, but funnier. ( )
  leslie.98 | Jun 26, 2013 |
Book 2 of Sams' epic southern trilogy. Little Porter leaves home and goes to college.

"This bittersweet and very funny novel tells the tale of Porter Osborn, Jr. from the time he leaves his home in a small Georgia town to attend Willingham University, until he completes college and is about to begin medical school. Even though he has been "raised right" in the Baptist faith, young Porter confronts his new environment with energy, pride, skepticism, and mischievous delight.

The Whisper of the River is the second of a trilogy of novels that describe the life of Porter Osborn, Jr. from early childhood through medical school at Emory University and his service in World War II. This is thinly veiled autobiographical fiction. Sams is a master storyteller: you can almost hear the tone of his voice as he spins these long, convoluted yarns of incipient love and breathtaking disaster in a small southern university in the late 1930's. The Whisper of the River, like Sams's other books, is more a series of delightful episodes than a well-plotted, coherent novel."

I love this trilogy! ( )
1 voter meadow68 | Feb 21, 2009 |
This is a continuation of the story of Porter Osborne Jr of whom we first met in Run with the Horsemen. In the first chapter the author gives us some of Porter's, aka Sambo, background and world view. The protagonist grew up in the country in the state of Georgia and was raised Baptist, hence, he was "raised right," This comes up throughout the story over and over, and Sambo often depends on his being raised right as his means of salvation as opposed to his faith in Christ. To restate it, Sambo can be very works oriented. Since he is very works oriented he lets himself off the hook, as many of us can relate. The author does a good job of showing how the same character and those around him can at one moment be living a moralistic life style and then immediately turn and show the depravity of man. Often I found myself being very disappointed in the choices Sambo made, then again as a man in need of grace should I really be surprised that this character also needs grace and forgiveness? There are times that the language seems more crude than necessary, but again this illustrates the sinfulness of man. I enjoyed and recommend this book and Lord willing, I will read the third installment. I still wonder how Sambo can take so much pride in being raised Baptist. After all, he is not Presbyterian. ( )
  morryb | Aug 28, 2008 |
A review by someone who hasn't read the book. But then, I have listened to the moans of two daughters for whom The Whisper of the River was required reading the summers before their college freshman years. Their progress reports and their essay drafts were enough for my social commentary, if not my literary commentary.

The Whisper of the River is a quaint picture of a time long gone, if still in the memories of those in retirement age. Sams has recently retired from his medical practice. Whisper is much closer to the John Birch Heresy Trials than the dissolution from the Georgia Baptist Convention. And integration wasn't even a possibility.

Small town boy gets his eyes opened by bigger fish in the big pond, as if Macon in 1942 was a big pond. And Fayetteville now has tv and the internet. Most of the shock of going to college is gone. But then, there're different things to shock.

This is probably a worthwhile read for the very thinly veiled history. But summer required reading is always a bad thing.
  DromJohn | Sep 5, 2007 |
Just look at that cover. How can you not love a book with such a great cover. I actually read this book in 9th grade because a guy I had a crush on was reading it. Turns out, it was pretty damn good. The Whisper of the River is an often-awkward, often-hilarious story about a naive, religious, "backwoods" young man who goes off to college in the 30's and comes of the age. The last sentence is will hit you in the gut. ( )
  ChicGeekGirl21 | Sep 1, 2007 |
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