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Some luck / The Last Hundred Years Trilogy / Book 1  Cover Image Book Book

Some luck / The Last Hundred Years Trilogy / Book 1 / Jane Smiley.

Smiley, Jane. (Author).

Summary:

"An epic novel that spans thirty years in the lives of a farm family in Iowa, telling a parallel story of the changes taking place in America from 1920 through the early 1950s." -- Provided by the Publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780307700315 (hardcover)
  • ISBN: 0307700313 (hardcover)
  • ISBN: 9780307744807 (trade pbk.) :
  • Physical Description: 395 pages : genealogical table ; 25cm.
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Alfred A. Knopf ; 2014.
Subject: Langdon family (Fictitious characters) > Fiction.
Rural families > Fiction.
Farm life > Fiction.
Social change > United States > History > 20th century > Fiction.
Iowa > Fiction.
United States > Civilization > 20th century > Fiction.
Genre: Family chronicles.
Historical fiction.

Available copies

  • 19 of 20 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 2 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sechelt Public Library. (Show preferred library)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 20 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Sechelt Public Library F SMIL (Text) 3326000325023 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Gibsons Public Library FIC SMIL (Text) 30886000570941 Adult Fiction Hardcover Volume hold Checked out 2024-05-24

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2014 July #1
    *Starred Review* Smiley was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for A Thousand Acres (1991), a novel about a farming family in Iowa. In her fourteenth novel, she returns to that fertile ground to tell the stories of the Langdons, a clan deeply in accord with the land, wherever their quests lead them. A seductive writer in perfect command of every element of language, Smiley sets a ruminative pace embodying the tempo of farm work, season to season. Beginning in 1920 and reaching 1953, this saga of the vicissitudes of luck and our futile efforts to control it is also a richly meteorological novel, exploring how the high and low pressures of the mind can determine a farm's bounty and losses just as droughts and blizzards do. While steadfast Walter worries, his smart, industrious wife, Rosanna, runs the household and cares for their children, beginning with courageous Frankie, followed by animal-lover Joey, romantic Lillian, scholarly Henry, and good Claire. As barbed in her wit as ever, Smiley is also munificently tender. The Langdons endure the Depression, Walter agonizes over giving up his trusty horses for a tractor, and Joe tries the new synthetic fertilizers. Then, as Frank serves in WWII and, covertly, the Cold War, the novel's velocity, intensity, and wonder redouble. Smiley's grand, assured, quietly heroic, and affecting novel is a supremely nuanced portrait of a family spanning three pivotal American decades. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With a major print run and extensive national author tour ramping up publicity, ever-popular Smiley's tremendous new novel will be on the top of countless to-read lists. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2014 October
    One family's destiny, year by year

    The question that will burn in a reader's mind when she finishes Some Luck, Jane Smiley's marvelous new novel, is: How long do I have to wait to read the second volume in The Last Hundred Years trilogy?

    Jane Smiley laughs heartily when asked. "Well, that's up to Knopf," she says during a call to her home in Carmel Valley, California. Smiley is the author of such best-selling novels as Moo and the Pulitzer Prize-winning A Thousand Acres, as well as five works of nonfiction. She says she has already completed all of the volumes in the trilogy, which covers 100 years in the life of one family, with each chapter focusing on a single year.

    Smiley is emphatic in her desire that "all three [volumes] come out as soon as possible. I really do feel that it's one thing, and it's important for volumes one and two to be in the reader's mind when he or she is reading volume three."

    Some Luck opens in 1920 with Walter Langdon, on the eve of his 25th birthday, walking the fence lines of his barely-making-it farm near Denby, Iowa. He is thinking about the vicissitudes of farming; the admonishments of his strict father, a more successful and established farmer who lives down the road; his love for his 20-year-old, self-possessed and talkative wife Rosanna; and his five-month-old son, Frank—the first of five children who grow into memorable individuals over the course of the novel, and, presumably, go on in the next two novels to great and less great things. Some Luck closes in 1953, with the Langdon family—responding to social and economic forces arising from the Great Depression and World War II—having mostly abandoned their hometown and moved to the far ends of the country, as so many other Americans did in that era.

    The Langdon family diaspora promises much for Smiley's exploration of 20th-century American culture and politics in future volumes of the trilogy. But in Some Luck, the family is largely homebound. Only Walter and Rosanna's final child, Claire, for example, is born in a hospital; the rest are born, sometimes excruciatingly, at home. So, with her vivid, tactile depiction of isolated, rural Iowa farm life, Smiley has imaginatively recaptured the dangers and rewards, the play of good luck and bad luck, in a lost way of life.

    "I really wanted to take these characters and follow them from babyhood to death," Smiley says. "And I want the reader to be reminded that there's so much that we don't remember, that there's so much that we don't know."

    I really wanted to take these characters and follow them from babyhood to death.

    Smiley lived in Iowa for about 24 years as a student and professor and ended up living for a while in a sort of abandoned farmhouse. "I used to take long walks in the countryside, and I used to think a lot about farming. It became an interest and continued to be an interest as I stayed in Iowa. How we get our food, who grows the food and what the food is made of is central to any culture. . . . The Langdons love the farm, but they hate the farm. They are suspicious of soybeans, but they love oats. It's an incredible amount of work, yet they feel a great sense of accomplishment. It was a very great pleasure to write about that."

    Smiley describes in some detail the research that went into creating her trilogy—the stacks of books on her office floor and her gratitude to Wikipedia, "which is great for a novelist because it's OK—in fact it's better—for your knowledge of something to be partial." Remarkably, that research is completely subsumed in the consciousness and conversations of her characters.

    As a result, Some Luck moves swiftly and assuredly through just over 33 years of the Langford clan's experiences. Smiley says the novel's velocity arises from the quirky year-by-year approach she deploys throughout the trilogy.

    "Most trilogies are groups of stories that include some of the same characters and then don't," she says. "I wanted to write a book about a family, but I wanted it to progress evenly for 100 years. I didn't know of anybody who had done that before and thought it would be fun to try. That's the nerdy side of me. I wanted each volume to cover 3313 years and each chapter to be a certain number of pages. The only way I can justify that is that, in a novel with a plot, the plot gives you a form, but in a book that progresses through time, then something as simple as the divisions of the book give you form. I had to do a lot of research, but the energy that was inherent in that form really carried me along."

    Some Luck ends up being a quiet, almost self-effacing, Midwestern tour de force.

    Some Luck ends up being a quiet, almost self-effacing, Midwestern tour de force. Smiley writes about farm life, family life and, suggestively, near the end, national political life. There are farming scenes, sex scenes, combat scenes and table-talk scenes.

    Smiley says she began with the concept of the trilogy but ended up being swept away by the trajectories of her characters.

    "There are three boys and two girls born over the course of 19 years. I wanted to be able to freely enter into everybody's mind. So I had to be open to their most likely experiences. Frank at his age obviously is going to go off to the Second World War. So I have to be open to male experiences. And there is Lillian, who is the darling child—I'm really quite fond of Lillian—who realizes as she enters high school that she isn't going to be everybody's darling.

    "I really did want to enter into the minds of the male characters, the female characters, the teenagers, the 20-year olds, the 40-year olds, and that meant I had to go everywhere that they might go."

    Wherever Smiley goes in Some Luck, most readers will willingly follow. Then wait, with bated breath, for her next steps.

     

    This article was originally published in the October 2014 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2015 July
    Book clubs: Alone in the wilderness

    Rebecca Rasmussen’s Evergreen is a haunting, beautifully executed novel set in the 1930s. Eveline and her German husband, Emil, make their home in the remote woods of Minnesota. Their cabin is rough, and they have little contact with other people. With the approach of war, Emil departs for Germany to look after his father, and Eveline stays on at the cabin with their baby, Hux. In Emil’s absence, a stranger comes to the cabin and rapes Eveline, who gets pregnant as a result and gives birth to a daughter, Naamah. Raised in a harsh Catholic orphanage, Naamah endures an unhappy childhood. As adults, she and Hux struggle to come to terms with the past and the harm inflicted on their family. Rasmussen creates memorable characters, including Eveline’s tough-as-nails friend Lulu, who knows how to take care of herself in the wilderness. The novel brings the Minnesota setting to vivid life with a stirring tale that’s as much about place as it is personal relationships and the repercussions of family history. 

    ONE LAST TRY
    Us, by David Nicholls, is a smart, compassionate novel about the nature of modern marriage and family. Londoners Douglas and Connie Petersen have been contentedly married for almost 20 years. Their 17-year-old son, Albie, has artistic inclinations, which Connie hopes to nurture with a trip to Europe. Before the trip, Connie drops a bomb: She tells Douglas that she may want a divorce—but she isn’t sure. Douglas is devoted to Connie and hopes that the getaway to Europe will revive their romance and bring him closer to temperamental Albie, with whom he has a distant relationship. It’s a pivotal moment in the life of the Petersen family. On their travels, as they tick off the capitals of Europe—Venice, Paris, Amsterdam—Douglas makes some surprising discoveries about himself and what he wants out of life. He’s a likable narrator, intelligent and funny, and the reader can’t help but cheer for him. As he did in the best-selling One Day, Nicholls here offers an appealing, often funny exploration of contemporary coupledom.

    TOP PICK FOR BOOK CLUBS
    Jane Smiley’s many fans have welcomed the appearance of Some Luck, the first volume in a new family-saga trilogy set in Iowa. Spanning three decades—the 1920s through the 1950s—the book chronicles the lives of Rosanna and Walter Langdon and their five children, with each chapter covering a single year. When the novel opens, Walter has come back from World War I to tend to the family farm, and the reader is treated to an intimate, poignant portrayal of life on the homestead. Each of the Langdon kids grows up to follow a different path—the oldest son, Frank, joins the Army, while reliable Joe remains at home, and the alluring Lillian marries a man who works for the government. The twists and turns of the family’s fortunes make for great reading. Smiley’s characters, as ever, are sharply drawn and authentically alive. This is a richly imagined, compelling work of fiction that will leave readers eager for the next installment.

     

    This article was originally published in the July 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2014 August #2
    Smiley (Private Life, 2010, etc.) follows an Iowa farm family through the thick of the 20th century. We first meet Walter Langdon in 1920 as he anxiously surveys his fields. Milk prices are down, and anyway "worry-shading-into-alarm [is] Walter's ever-present state," thinks wife Rosanna. The freakish accidental death of a toddler daughter is the only incident here that really justifies Walter's apprehensions (it wouldn't be a Smiley novel without at least one cruel twist of fate), but underpinning the comparatively placid unfolding of three decades is farm folks' knowledge that disaster is always one bad crop away, and luck is never to be relied on. (The sardonic folk tale "Lucky Hans" is retold several times.) The Langdons raise five children to varied destinies. Smart, charismatic Frank leaves home for college and the Army. Steady, sensitive Joe stays home on the farm, its perennial round of backbreaking labor somewhat alleviated by such innovations as tractors and commercial fertilizer. Golden girl Lillian marries a government employee who gets Frank involved in spying on suspected communist agents after the war—ironic, since Rosanna's sister Eloise is a Trotskyist. Times are changing: Henry, the family intellectual, will clearly end up in academia; Lillian and Frank are both living in Eastern suburbs. Youngest daughter Claire is less vivid than her siblings, and the names begin to blur a bit as the postwar baby boom creates a burgeoning new generation, but for the most part Smiley juggles characters and events with her customary aplomb and storytelling craft. The novel doesn't so much end as stop, adding to the sense that we've simply dropped in on a continuing saga. Smiley is the least sentimental of writers, but when Rosanna and Walter look at the 23 people gathered at Thanksgiving in 1948 and "agreed in an instant: something had created itself from nothing," it's a moment of honest sentiment, honestly earned. An expansive, episodic tale showing this generally flinty author in a mellow mood: surprising, but engaging. Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2014 May #1

    As Smiley demonstrated in her Pulitzer Prize winner, A Thousand Acres, she can write powerfully about American farm life while illuminating deeper truths. Here, moving from the 1920s to the 1950s, she shows how Iowa farmers Rosanna and Walter Langdon try to pass on their values to their five children. As the children grow up, with some departing for America's coasts, we get a wide-angle view of midcentury America. A featured author at LJ's Day of Dialog.

    [Page 56]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2014 July #1

    In her new work, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Smiley (A Thousand Acres) moves from the 1920s to the 1950s as she unfolds the life of Iowa farmers Rosanna and Walter Langdon and their five children: brilliant, mercurial Frank; animal-loving Joe, the real farmer of the bunch; sweet Lillian, who enters into a happy marriage that has repercussions for the rest of her family; iconoclastic, bookish Henry; and baby Claire. As the children grow up and sometimes move away, we get a wide-angle view of mid-century America; a cousin's experiences with radicals in Chicago and San Francisco also take us beyond the hardscrabble life of the farm, as does the advent of World War II, which leads to Frank's enlistment and eventually to Cold War rumblings. Told in beautiful, you-are-there language, the narrative lets ordinary events accumulate to give us a significant feel of life at the time, with the importance and dangers of farming particularly well portrayed. In the end, though, this is the story of parents and children, of hope and disappointment, with Frank's prickly and uncomfortable story the fulcrum. VERDICT Highly recommended; a lush and grounded reading experience. [See Prepub Alert, 4/7/14.]—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

    [Page 79]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2014 July #1

    In the first volume of a planned trilogy, Smiley returns to the Iowa of her Pulitzer Prize–winning A Thousand Acres, but in a very different vein. The warring sisters and abusive father of that book have given way to the Langdons, a loving family whose members, like most people, are exceptional only in their human particularities. The story covers the 1920s through the early '50s, years during which the family farm survives the Depression and drought, and the five Langdon children grow up and have to decide whether to stay or leave. Smiley is particularly good at depicting the world from the viewpoint of young children—all five of the Langdons are distinct individuals from their earliest days. The standout is oldest son Frank, born stubborn and with an eye for opportunity, but as Smiley shifts her attention from one character to another, they all come to feel like real and relatable people. The saga of an Iowa farm family might not seem like an exciting premise, but Smiley makes it just that, conjuring a world—time, place, people—and an engaging story that makes readers eager to know what happens next. Smiley plans to extend the tale of the Langdon family well into the 21st century; she's off to a very strong start. (Oct.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC

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