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The Last Days of Dogtown by Anita Diamant (2006, Paperback, Reprint) 
The Last Days of Dogtown by Anita Diamant (2006, Paperback, Reprint)

 
The Last Days of Dogtown by Anita Diamant (2006, Paperback, Reprint)

Author: Anita Diamant
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication Date: 2006-06-28
Language: English
Format: Paperback
ISBN-10: 0743225740
ISBN-13: 9780743225748
Product ID: EPID52193433
Description: Beginning in 1814 at a funeral, THE LAST DAYS OF DOGTOWN is a portrait of a downtrodden Massachusetts town over the course of a decade. Populated by a large cast of sympathetic and colorful characters, the story follows their lives as th...
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Synopsis
Beginning in 1814 at a funeral, THE LAST DAYS OF DOGTOWN is a portrait of a downtrodden Massachusetts town over the course of a decade. Populated by a large cast of sympathetic and colorful characters, the story follows their lives as they strive, fail, occasionally triumph, and often suffer. The focus of the story is the sad romance, thwarted by racism, between Judy Rhines, who is white, and Cornelius Finson, who is a free black man. Fittingly, the inhabitants of Dogtown include a population of dogs, some of whom contribute to the story.

Details
Publication Date:2006-06-28
Edition Description:Reprint

Size
Length:263 pages
Height:8.0 in
Width:5.3 in
Thickness:0.5 in
Weight:8.0 oz

Publisher's Note
Endeavoring to build a life for herself in a dying early nineteenth-century New England town, Judy Rhines struggles with feelings of profound loneliness and impacts the lives of Black Ruth, a freed slave who dresses as a man and works as a stone mason; Mrs. Stanley, an imperious madam; and Oliver, who overcomes a painful childhood. By the author of The Red Tent. Reprint. 200,000 first printing.

Industry Reviews
"...Diamant renders these forgotten lives with imagination and sensitivity."
Publishers Weekly (06/27/2005)

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    Top Reviews
      An Exquisite Historical Novel Worth Reading
    Review created: 12/16/08
    7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

    Anita Diamant's The Last Days of Dogtown is a radical departure from the biblical setting of her best-selling novel, The Red Tent. Her backdrop for this melancholy tale is the windswept shores of Cape Ann, Massachusetts in the early days of the nineteenth century. The declining hamlet, nicknamed Dogtown by detractors, is home to a pack of semi-feral dogs and an eclectic group of residents too stubborn, too poverty stricken, too worn down, or too old to relocate to nearby Gloucester.

    A group of widows, witches, spinsters, whores, abused and neglected children, freed slaves, and one particularly odious villain populate the ramshackle hovels that dot the ruggedly stark landscape. At the center of a series of heart-wrenching sagas is Judy Rhines, a kindhearted maiden who harbors a secret so scandalous that its revelation would bring her instant ruin and tear the moribund town apart. One by one, the animal and human characters die or move away, sealing the fate of the disintegtrating community.

    In The Red Tent Diamant uses broad, brilliant brush strokes of prose to create the portrait of her Old Testament visions of sex and violence, while The Last Days of Dogtown is as plain as a charcoal sketch. Basing this novel loosely in fact- she discovered the existence of the town by reading a pamphlet- Diamant adeptly manages to evoke the minutae of everyday living in an all but forgotten place and time in history.

    In The Last Days of Dogtown, Diamant creates a gripping historical novel as she delves into a lost crevice of human drama in 19th-century Massachusetts and presents it with a modern tone. The novel ends with a sigh which some readers, accustomed to having everything tied up in a nice bow by television and movies, will find unsatisfying. She takes us alongside the drunkards, whores, and witches, and, in the end, she evokes the tragic sadness of humanity in the grays and pale sunshine of Cape Ann. This is a book worth reading.


    Review ID: 10000000009806468
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