Tämä sivusto käyttää evästeitä palvelujen toimittamiseen, toiminnan parantamiseen, analytiikkaan ja (jos et ole kirjautunut sisään) mainostamiseen. Käyttämällä LibraryThingiä ilmaiset, että olet lukenut ja ymmärtänyt käyttöehdot ja yksityisyydensuojakäytännöt. Sivujen ja palveluiden käytön tulee olla näiden ehtojen ja käytäntöjen mukaista.
The Good Spirit of Laurel Ridge, Jesse Stuart provides a tale of the Kentucky hill country which constantly excites, amuses, and amazes. The central character of this book is Theopolis Akers Old Op to his friends the hermit of Laurel Ridge who is recognized as one of Stuart s most colorful character creations. Hermit, squatter, steadfast believer in the world of the spirits ( sperets, he calls them), Old Op lives a simple life atop deserted Laurel Ridge. He spends his days tilling his small patch of corn, gathering roots and nuts, or fishing with his bow and arrow. By night he sits on his porch, chews calmus weed, and listens to the wind blowing through the horse-hair harp strung up on the cabin wall. If he wants company, there is always his hound dog to talk to or various spirits to commune with including his dead wife, Beadie. But then the outside world invades Laurel Ridge. First Op s daughter Lucretia comes from Dayton to take care of him (so she says). Next two distant cousins, in advanced stages of atom-bomb neurosis, seek sanctuary in the hills. (Op has never heard of this yar adam-bumb. ) And finally a mysterious wild man is seen roaming the hills and hollows along the Ridge. At first Op is willing to share his Ridge with others, even teaching them the secrets of life in his natural paradise. But when they begin to corrupt it with their soft city ways; when a dozen foxes are found dead; and when the city folk refuse to heed his sperets and laugh at the music of his harp, then old Op grows cantankerous and wishes them gone. In the end the old ways prevail, and Theopolis Akers, squatter and hermit extraordinaire, is left in solitude on Laurel Ridge. Through Op, who loves to tell stories, Jesse Stuart spins outlandish yarns of the hill country about the time Op rode home clinging to the devil s horns or about the log he lay down on in the woods one day which turned out to be a huge snake. In The Good Spirit of Laurel Ridge, Jesse Stuart presents some of his most unique and colorful material. Humorous, astonishing, and even outrageous, it is truly authentic a story with all the charm of a mountain ballad a story that only Jesse Stuart could have written.… (lisätietoja)
The Good Spirit of Laurel Ridge, Jesse Stuart provides a tale of the Kentucky hill country which constantly excites, amuses, and amazes. The central character of this book is Theopolis Akers Old Op to his friends the hermit of Laurel Ridge who is recognized as one of Stuart s most colorful character creations. Hermit, squatter, steadfast believer in the world of the spirits ( sperets, he calls them), Old Op lives a simple life atop deserted Laurel Ridge. He spends his days tilling his small patch of corn, gathering roots and nuts, or fishing with his bow and arrow. By night he sits on his porch, chews calmus weed, and listens to the wind blowing through the horse-hair harp strung up on the cabin wall. If he wants company, there is always his hound dog to talk to or various spirits to commune with including his dead wife, Beadie. But then the outside world invades Laurel Ridge. First Op s daughter Lucretia comes from Dayton to take care of him (so she says). Next two distant cousins, in advanced stages of atom-bomb neurosis, seek sanctuary in the hills. (Op has never heard of this yar adam-bumb. ) And finally a mysterious wild man is seen roaming the hills and hollows along the Ridge. At first Op is willing to share his Ridge with others, even teaching them the secrets of life in his natural paradise. But when they begin to corrupt it with their soft city ways; when a dozen foxes are found dead; and when the city folk refuse to heed his sperets and laugh at the music of his harp, then old Op grows cantankerous and wishes them gone. In the end the old ways prevail, and Theopolis Akers, squatter and hermit extraordinaire, is left in solitude on Laurel Ridge. Through Op, who loves to tell stories, Jesse Stuart spins outlandish yarns of the hill country about the time Op rode home clinging to the devil s horns or about the log he lay down on in the woods one day which turned out to be a huge snake. In The Good Spirit of Laurel Ridge, Jesse Stuart presents some of his most unique and colorful material. Humorous, astonishing, and even outrageous, it is truly authentic a story with all the charm of a mountain ballad a story that only Jesse Stuart could have written.