AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Winesburg, Ohio

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: Winesburg, Ohio
by Sherwood Anderson
ISBN: 0-553-21439-X
Publisher: Bantam
Pub. Date: 01 March, 1995
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $5.95
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 4.11 (56 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 3
Summary: Characters
Comment: Winesburg, Ohio is a story based on real characters in the early 1900's in a small northern Ohio town. If you enjoy in depth detail on characters you would enjoy this story. Every chapter is based on a new person which can get boring and confusing for some people seeking adventure. I read this book because I live close to where the story took place and thought it would be interesting to learn more about my area's history. I could relate with some of the places described in the story, which made me more interested and kept me reading. The characters described in the story are easy to relate people of my own acquaintance with; each character has their own unique story. The way that Sherwood Anderson writes makes you almost get inside of the characters' head to make you think like that character had thought. It took me a while to get the drift of the story but it seems most people will eventually get hooked on a certain character. I would not recommend this story for a person interested in reading more about action and adventure. Winesburg, Ohio is a great story for someone that would like to know how people in history had thought and that would like to experience Ohio in the early 1900's.

Rating: 5
Summary: Sad but Hopeful
Comment: A cycle of short stories concerning residents of a small Ohio town in the 1890s. The characters don't feel in any way part of life in the town around them. They don't get what they want and they don't know what they want. They're isolated and disconnected by their inability to express themselves.

In "Sophistication," the second-to-last story, 18-year-old George Willard, the town's newspaper reporter, gets a vision of why it's so difficult for people to get hold of something to live their lives by:

"He knows that in spite of all the stout talk of his fellows he must live and die in uncertainty, a thing blown by the winds, a thing destined like corn to wilt in the sun."

It's a sad book, but with an undercurrent of hope for life in the modern world.

I should also mention that the book was considered morbidly sexual at the time it was published, if you're the type who likes that sort of thing...

Rating: 1
Summary: Don't Waste Your Time. I Did.
Comment: I just finished this book and I have to say that I honestly didn't think it was very good. I've read different things about this book for years, and everyone talks like this is some landmark piece of American prose, but I don't get it. The stories are rambling and sloppy and often pointless. The writing seems very amateurish. I got tired of hearing about how every young man in the book felt this yearning to leave Winesburg and see "Life". I mean, isn't that the biggest cliche of small town life that there is. And he kept hitting that same note over and over and over and over again, like a nail being driven into my skull. With all the acclaim this book has gotten, it's safe to say that the Devil has the deed to Anderson's soul safely filed away somewhere.

This book reminded me a little of Saroyan's The Human Comedy. Both books are quirky and they both have an odd way of sounding as if their characters come from children's books. I wasn't too crazy about The Human Comedy either, but it's like a Shakesperian masterpiece compared to this. The Human Comedy's quirkiness is charming, while Winesburg's quirkiness just makes the book seem inept. The Human comedy is much more tightly organized and better written and it's loosely connected episodes almost, almost, form a narrative structure. If you really want to read about life in an American small town, then please, read The Human Comedy or Lake Wobegon Days, or even Rose Wilder Lane's Old Home Town. There's nothing that you'll get out of this book that you can't get from any of these others.

In the introduction to my edition, Irving Howe talks about how much this book inspired him when he was a teenager and opened up new depths of emotion and blah, blah, blah. I find this a little hard to believe. When I was 16 I read Kerouac's On the Road and I was swept away, so I know the kind of experience he's talking about. But I feel very sorry for anyone who claims that this book sent their young heart fluttering. I can imagine someone young reading Victor Hugo or Dickens or Thomas Wolfe or Gone With The Wind and feeling that the flame of their life has been lit. But not Winesburg. Please, please no, not Winesburg. This book is like a box of wet matches and broken sticks.

Similar Books:

Title: The Egg and Other Stories
by Sherwood Anderson
ISBN: 0486414116
Publisher: Dover Pubns
Pub. Date: 05 October, 2000
List Price(USD): $1.50
Title: In Our Time
by Ernest Hemingway
ISBN: 0684822768
Publisher: Scribner
Pub. Date: 31 January, 1996
List Price(USD): $11.00
Title: Main Street
by Sinclair Lewis, Thomas Mallon
ISBN: 0451526821
Publisher: Signet
Pub. Date: June, 1998
List Price(USD): $5.95
Title: Spoon River Anthology
by Edgar Lee Masters, John Hollander
ISBN: 0451525302
Publisher: New American Library
Pub. Date: January, 1992
List Price(USD): $5.95
Title: The Great Gatsby
by F. Scott Fitzgerald
ISBN: 0684801523
Publisher: Scribner
Pub. Date: 01 June, 1995
List Price(USD): $12.95

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache