#2 of 100 - The Green Age Asher Witherow
Sunday, January 07, 2007
The Green Age of Asher Witherow

by M. Allen Cunningham
[my comments in red]
From Publishers Weekly
A miner's son is immersed in the dark spirituality of an insular, mostly Welsh Northern California mining town in the mid-19th century in this gritty coming-of-age debut.
[sigh, when a review uses "gritty" i should just walk away]
When Asher Witherow is eight, he witnesses the burning of his best friend, Thomas Motion, in a horrific accident as the boys explore the caverns of nearby Mt. Diablo. Witherow hides his knowledge of the accident even as a search is mounted, a situation that intrigues Josiah Lyte, the boy's bizarre schoolteacher and local preacher who eventually gets cast out by the populace for integrating Hindu elements from his upbringing in India into his work.
[hm, er...ok]
Much of the novel deals with Lyte's mystical influence over his precocious pupil, but some years after the accident Witherow also enters into an ill-fated romance with his "evening friend," Alice Flood.
[mystical AND precocious]
Cunningham does a superb job of capturing the grim rhythm of life in the mines, balancing that material with fine childhood character studies. Occasionally, the author gets carried away and the spiritual material turns lurid, but the beauty of Cunningham's naturalistic prose and the strong characterization of young Asher Witherow make this a worthwhile debut from a noteworthy new author.
[oh forget it, the review was better than the book. naturalistic prose? what the HELL does that mean?]
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[how you you think Elsevier is pronounced? probably like it sounds]



1 Comments:
hey there,
just starting to catch up. already review #2, nice! anyway, PK used to work for reed elsevier - or a division of, i think maybe even when she lived with you. how crazy. anyway, its pronounced elsa-veer.
happy new year!
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