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Guthrie, A(lfred) B(ertram), Jr. 1901–: Critical Essay by Richard H. Cracroft

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About 2 pages (496 words)
The Big Sky Summary

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[The Big Sky] owes much of its convincing authenticity not only to Guthrie's use of historical sources, but to the imaginative manner in which he wove the texture of his design to recreate a region which "is not oppressed," wrote the Reverend Samuel Parker, "by the tyranny of religion," nor "awed by the frown of virtue."

And this imaginative excellence in interpolating a vivid fiction from historical fact in turn owes much to Guthrie's own longstanding love affair with the American West, an affection reflected in every page of the book. Indeed, while writing the book he claims to have achieved a kind of mystical unity with the characters, an empathy which kept him writing ahead of his research. (p. 174)

This is a free excerpt of 120 words. There are 496 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Guthrie, A(lfred) B(ertram), Jr. 1901–: Critical Essay by Richard H. Cracroft from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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