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In the Distance
US $6.49
ApproximatelyRM 27.91
Condition:
Good
A book that has been read but is in good condition. Very minimal damage to the cover including scuff marks, but no holes or tears. The dust jacket for hard covers may not be included. Binding has minimal wear. The majority of pages are undamaged with minimal creasing or tearing, minimal pencil underlining of text, no highlighting of text, no writing in margins. No missing pages.
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Located in: Powder Springs, Georgia, United States
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eBay item number:297302832226
Item specifics
- Condition
- Release Year
- 2017
- ISBN
- 9781566894883
About this product
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Coffee House Press
ISBN-10
1566894883
ISBN-13
9781566894883
eBay Product ID (ePID)
234334977
Product Key Features
Book Title
In the Distance
Number of Pages
240 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2017
Topic
Psychological, Sagas, Literary, Westerns
Genre
Fiction
Format
Trade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height
0.8 in
Item Weight
12 Oz
Item Length
5.5 in
Item Width
8.3 in
Additional Product Features
Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2017-000413
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, starred review "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "Like an electric cross between Patrick deWitt's The Sisters Brothers and Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian, In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto, "Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, boxed and starred review "As Diaz, who delights in playful language, lists, and stream-of-consciousness prose, reconstructs [Hawk's] adventures, he evokes the multicultural nature of westward expansion, in which immigrants did the bulk of the hard labor and suffered the gravest dangers...an ambitious and thoroughly realized work of revisionist historical fiction." --Kirkus "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto "While In the Distance can be read as a revisionist western--and totally enjoyed and chewed on as such--what makes Daz's book truly exceptional is how far beyond a simple genre it goes. A beautiful, thoughtful, and often heartbreaking exploration of lonesomeness, the simple confusion of just living, and the magnificent need for human connection." --Justin Souther, Malaprop's Bookstore, "Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, boxed and starred review "As Diaz, who delights in playful language, lists, and stream-of-consciousness prose, reconstructs [Hawk's] adventures, he evokes the multicultural nature of westward expansion, in which immigrants did the bulk of the hard labor and suffered the gravest dangers...an ambitious and thoroughly realized work of revisionist historical fiction." --Kirkus "[In the Distance] is a hero's journey, or possibly a monster's journey--the ending recalls the austere beauty of the last scenes of Frankenstein--and one of the great pleasures of Diaz's singular book is to observe the complicated ways in which the hero and the monster coexist." --BOMB, "Fall Books Preview" "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto "While In the Distance can be read as a revisionist western--and totally enjoyed and chewed on as such--what makes Daz's book truly exceptional is how far beyond a simple genre it goes. A beautiful, thoughtful, and often heartbreaking exploration of lonesomeness, the simple confusion of just living, and the magnificent need for human connection." --Justin Souther, Malaprop's Bookstore, "Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, boxed and starred review "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto, "Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, boxed and starred review "As Diaz, who delights in playful language, lists, and stream-of-consciousness prose, reconstructs [Hawk''s] adventures, he evokes the multicultural nature of westward expansion, in which immigrants did the bulk of the hard labor and suffered the gravest dangers...an ambitious and thoroughly realized work of revisionist historical fiction." --Kirkus "Perhaps most striking is Diaz''s ability to describe the known as unknown, the all too familiar when it is yet unfamiliar. The nature of his protagonist, Hkan Sderstrm, a lost and wandering Swedish immigrant in the rough, largely uninhabited American territory, allows Diaz to write of what it is like to encounter the foreign or forgotten, such that the reader has a similarly enlightening experience, encountering it anew." --Paris Review Daily "[In the Distance] is a hero''s journey, or possibly a monster''s journey--the ending recalls the austere beauty of the last scenes of Frankenstein--and one of the great pleasures of Diaz''s singular book is to observe the complicated ways in which the hero and the monster coexist." --BOMB, "Fall Books Preview" "A Swedish immigrant, the American West, and the powers of fate unite in Hernan Diaz''s stunning novel, In the Distance." --Foreword Reviews "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz''s novel is a creature all its own, and it''s one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It''s a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz''s In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams''s Butcher''s Crossing, Andrey Platonov''s Soul, and Richard Hughes''s A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel''s first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they''d hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz''s In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz''s skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto "While In the Distance can be read as a revisionist western--and totally enjoyed and chewed on as such--what makes Daz''s book truly exceptional is how far beyond a simple genre it goes. A beautiful, thoughtful, and often heartbreaking exploration of lonesomeness, the simple confusion of just living, and the magnificent need for human connection." --Justin Souther, Malaprop''s Bookstore, "Diaz cleverly updates an old-fashioned yarn, and his novel is rife with exquisite moments..." --Publishers Weekly, boxed and starred review "As Diaz, who delights in playful language, lists, and stream-of-consciousness prose, reconstructs [Hawk's] adventures, he evokes the multicultural nature of westward expansion, in which immigrants did the bulk of the hard labor and suffered the gravest dangers...an ambitious and thoroughly realized work of revisionist historical fiction." --Kirkus "[In the Distance] is a hero's journey, or possibly a monster's journey--the ending recalls the austere beauty of the last scenes of Frankenstein--and one of the great pleasures of Diaz's singular book is to observe the complicated ways in which the hero and the monster coexist." --BOMB, "Fall Books Preview" "A Swedish immigrant, the American West, and the powers of fate unite in Hernan Diaz's stunning novel, In the Distance." --Foreword Reviews "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto "While In the Distance can be read as a revisionist western--and totally enjoyed and chewed on as such--what makes Daz's book truly exceptional is how far beyond a simple genre it goes. A beautiful, thoughtful, and often heartbreaking exploration of lonesomeness, the simple confusion of just living, and the magnificent need for human connection." --Justin Souther, Malaprop's Bookstore, "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain "Like an electric cross between Patrick deWitt's The Sisters Brothers and Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian, In the Distance by Hernan Diaz sends a shotgun blast through standard received notions of the Old West and who was causing trouble in it. Hkan and his adventures, which are truly extraordinary, not to mention beautifully written, had me from the novel's first striking chapter to the last." --Laird Hunt "On its surface, In the Distance is a haunting and unique tale of survival--with all the thrilling frustrations of such. Deeper still, it is a story about the devastation wrought by the American Dream--the West as it happened to many, in spite of all they'd hoped." --Colin Winnette "Great stories are driven by desire. Hkan Sderstrm, the remarkable protagonist of Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, sets off on an unremitting quest to find his brother. As he journeys against the grain of the frontier, Hkan confronts lust, love, honor, greed, and confounding betrayal. He also crafts a solitude that becomes, in Diaz's skilled hands, as American as the landscape. In prose that is as bold as the western sky, Diaz has written an unforgettable tale of soulfulness and survival." --Alyson Hagy, author of Boleto, "In the Distance is a singular and haunting novel, an epic journey into the wilderness of nineteenth-century America and into the depths of solitude. In its majestic evocation of landscapes it bears a resemblance to Blood Meridian, but in the meditative precision of its language and the moral compass that spins at its heart, Diaz's novel is a creature all its own, and it's one of the very few works of fiction that transport you, emotionally and imaginatively, to an utterly new place. It's a breathtaking trip." --Paul La Farge "If I could hand you this book I would. Read this. Hernan Diaz's In the Distance is a portrait of this country as both a dreamscape and a living nightmare. With echoes of John Williams's Butcher's Crossing, Andrey Platonov's Soul, and Richard Hughes's A High Wind in Jamaica, this is fiction at its finest--propulsive, unsettling, wildly ambitious, and an unforgettable journey that we will certainly return to in the years to come." --Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain
Dewey Decimal
813.6
Synopsis
A young Swedish boy, separated from his brother, becomes a man; the man, despite himself, becomes a legend and outlaw., Diaz is originally from Argentina, was raised in Sweden, and now lives in New York, giving his writing, and perspective, and insistently cosmopolitan quality--this western is unencumbered by a narrow idea of America. Håkan's profound isolation (his height, his lack of English, his foreignness) give the novel a loneliness and futility that push back against common tropes (manifest destiny, individualism) of the genre. Håkan's encounters with miners, naturalists, fundamentalists, and swindlers, all are instances of some form of plunder, complicating notions of discovery that so often efface the precolonial civilizations of the United States. Physical descriptions of the land, as well as Håkan's complete ignorance of the country where he finds himself, create a portrait of stirring, impassive, destructive space and scale, the likes of which were unimaginable to European settlers. Fans of the best of Westerns (their darkness, their emotional punch) will gravitate to Diaz for his lack of sentiment and the awe and despair the landscape and his character's story conjures up in him., Finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction A young Swedish immigrant finds himself penniless and alone in California. The boy travels East in search of his brother, moving on foot against the great current of emigrants pushing West. Driven back again and again, he meets naturalists, criminals, religious fanatics, swindlers, Indians, and lawmen, and his exploits turn him into a legend. Diaz defies the conventions of historical fiction and genre, offering a probing look at the stereotypes that populate our past and a portrait of radical foreignness. Hernan Diaz is the author of Borges, Between History and Eternity (Bloomsbury 2012), managing editor of RHM , and associate director of the Hispanic Institute at Columbia University. He lives in New York.
LC Classification Number
PS3604.I17I5 2017
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