FREE MAY THERE BE A ROAD: A NOVEL PDF

Louis L'Amour | 320 pages | 05 Jul 2002 | Random House USA Inc | 9780553583991 | English | New York, United States Novel Free Read Online - Read Books Online Free

Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. Spirited American stories gathered together for the first time From the coasts of Brazil to the borders of Tibet to the very heartland of America, May There Be a Road gathers ten previously uncollected stories that capture the magnificent scope and sense of epic adventure that epitomize Louis L'Amour classic fiction. In these vivid settings L'Amour takes us into the pivotal Spirited American May There be a Road: A Novel gathered together for the first time From the coasts of Brazil to the borders of Tibet to the very heartland of America, May There Be a Road gathers ten previously uncollected stories that capture the magnificent scope and sense of epic adventure that epitomize Louis L'Amour classic fiction. In these vivid settings L'Amour takes us into the pivotal moments when lives are altered forever, when men and women face a deadly enemy, find a kindred spirit, or confront their own mortality. Among the unforgettable characters we meet here are a hard-living, hard-drinking freighter captain whose penchant for flying may change the course of World War II. A lonely frontiersman who unexpectedly finds himself the protector of two orphans. A boxer who accepts a gambler's payoff and then must fight to redeem himself. A detective willing to believe an unproven story in order to discover a painful truth hidden in a small town. And in the title story L'Amour weaves May There be a Road: A Novel powerful tale of a young Tibetan khan who leads a band of horsemen on a daring escape across treacherous mountain terrain. At stake is the survival of a people and an ancient way of life. Evoking the American spirit of bravery, May There be a Road: A Novel, adventure, and self-reliance as few writers have, this extraordinary May There be a Road: A Novel proves once again that L'Amour has set a standard yet to be matched. Get A Copy. Paperbackpages. Published April 28th by Bantam first published May More Details Original Title. Other Editions Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about May There Be a Roadplease sign up. Lists with This Book. This book is not yet featured on Listopia. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 3. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Shelves: fiction-and-humor. Most of these have been compiled by his May There be a Road: A Novel, Beau. As I understand it, this is to be the penultimate collection, with one more to follow. Feb 29, James Aura rated it really liked it. If you're curious why Louis L'Amour was one of America's top-selling authors, this book is a good introduction. Louis wrote about everything from Tibetan farmers rebelling against the Chinese Army to boxing scams, rascally cowboys and territory in between. His simple, colorful writing style carried a muscular heft. I found his plots and characters a bit simple, but these were, after all, short stories. His novels are much more developed on all fronts. Overall, I found it a recreational read. Jul 28, James Christensen rated it it was amazing. Not published before. Actually quite good. Aug 16, Peter Charleston rated it liked it Shelves: library. Nice collection of short stories by Louis L'Amour. I found this book at a garage sale where someone was giving it away. Kind of a fun read, though the boxing stories all seemed to be the same. Jun 22, Arlene rated it it was May There be a Road: A Novel Shelves: book-challengepick-a-shelf-challengeshort-storieswestern. This is a collection of stories that Louis L'Amour wrote over the years. Some of them were previously published and some were never published. The title story tells of a young Khan in Tibet who leads members of his tribe over a treacherous mountain pass and a swinging bridge over a deep gorge. I has taken 4 years to rebuild the bridge, during which the tribe was isolated on a high plateau. The first trip over the new bridge is to claim his bride. However, when he arrives at his bride's home, the This is a collection of stories that Louis L'Amour wrote over the years. However, when he arrives at his bride's home, they discover that the Han Chinese had moved in. The military leader wants to find the path over their pass that will lead into India. Several of the other stories tell about fighters and vividly describe the fights that they make. L'Amour was a prize fighter in his younger days and these stories are particularly descriptive. Several of the stories are classic "Westerns". All together a very satisfying collection. Feb 07, Ed rated it May There be a Road: A Novel liked it Shelves: actionadventureshort-stories. Ten previously uncollected stories. Among the characters we meet here are a hard-living, hard-drinking freighter captain whose penchant for flying may change the course of World War II. And in the title story L'Amo Ten previously uncollected stories. The title account has Mongol-style villagers bravely staving off Chinese machine guns on a winter mountain. Other war action swoops over revolutionary Brazil. Detectives are strong, brave, smart, and in other collections. Cactus Kid, we know elsewhere as far-ranging Clay, May There be a Road: A Novel for and lets go a Spanish senorita and her estate. Jul 05, Brian rated it it was ok Shelves: western. The main character in each story was either a detective, western or boxer, although it didn't seem to matter very much as each story and character blended into each other. There are some novels of Louis L'Amour that are fun to read, pioneer spirit and all, but I found each of these stories to be exactly the same; adown on May There be a Road: A Novel luck hero that does something redeeming and wins the girl. I struggled through the last few stories Dec 27, Kingsley Kelley rated it liked it. Entertaining short stories from early in his writing career that exhibit a solid knowledge of his settings and subject matter, and show the beginnings of the confident story-teller L'Amour would become. Dec 27, Lee Button rated it really liked it. Louis L'Amour wrote more than cowboy stories. This is an enjoyable collection of short stories including 2 of his first 3. The characters are real and the plots believable. He must also have been a big fan of boxing. This was a collection of shorts. I didn't like this as much as some of L'Amour's other books because he wrote about many things in this book that didn't interest me much, like boxing. Oct 23, Sheree rated it it was amazing Recommends it for: Everyone. This book has detailed animated short stories. Very adventurous. It gave me motivation to go through the day. The characters that Louis Lamour writes about are very rough around the edges, heroic! It's a blast to read! Mar 08, Ryan Mishap rated it did not like it Shelves: when-i-was-a-lad. The auteur tries his hand at short stories set in various places around the globe, but they are just as bad as the rest of his drivel. Dec 03, Fredrick Danysh rated it really liked it. A collection of short stories written by the late Louis L'Amour covering a wide range of setting. The Green Road by Anne Enright review – an exquisite collage of Irish lives | Books | The Guardian

Tobacco Road is a novel by about Georgia sharecroppers. It was dramatized for Broadway by Jack Kirkland inand ran for eight years. A film versiondeliberately played mainly for laughs, was directed by John Fordand the storyline was considerably altered. The novel was included in Life magazine's list of the outstanding books of — is set in rural Georgia, several miles outside Augusta during the worst years of the Great Depression. It depicts a family of poor white tenant farmers, the Lesters, as some of the many small Southern cotton farmers made redundant by the industrialization of production and the migration into cities. The main character of the novel is Jeeter Lester, an ignorant and sinful man who is redeemed by his love of the land and his faith in the fertility and promise of the soil. Lov Bensey, a friend of the Lesters, walks to his home at the train yard coal chute. He has walked seven and a half miles to get a sack of winter turnips for 50 cents, which is half of his daily wage. On his way home, he stops by the Lesters to talk to Jeeter about Jeeter's year-old daughter Pearl, to whom Lov is married. The entire family, acting in complete desperation, works to steal the turnips from Lov, who then becomes nauseated May There be a Road: A Novel the sight and leaves for home. At this point, the preacher Bessie enters the scene. Sister Bessie Rice, like Ellie May, also has a deformity of the face. Despite this, May There be a Road: A Novel is still attracted to her. However, Dude is more interested in her offer of letting him drive the new automobile that she anticipates purchasing than in actually marrying her. Bessie then goes home to her hovel to ask God whether or not she and Dude should get married. Jeeter has lived on the same plot of land since he was born, May There be a Road: A Novel even though his standard of living continues to decline until he and his May There be a Road: A Novel begin to starve, Jeeter stubbornly refuses to move to the city to make a better life for himself by working in a cotton mill. Such a life, he insists, would be impossible for him to live. Ada as well is fixated on her death, but their morbidity does not take the form of lamentation or self-pity. Ada's main concern is that she not be buried in her tattered, old, out-of-style calico dress May There be a Road: A Novel, and Jeeter's main concern is that his body not be left in the old corn storage shed where it might be eaten by rats. Neither of these two characters have any doubts that they are going to die sometime soon, and it is not their present life but their lifeless bodies which they care about most. Possibly they realize that their way of life is already dead; thus their primary concern becomes not the preservation of that life but its appearance during burial. When Sister Bessie returns the next day to the Lester house, she exclaims that God has given her his approval for the marriage between Dude and herself. The two then start the long walk to Fuller in order to purchase a new Ford for the purpose of traveling around the country and preaching. Later, Dude and Bessie go off to get their marriage certificate and are questioned by the county official, who reprimands Bessie for attempting to marry a boy of 16 years. Bessie claims she is only 31 years old to May There be a Road: A Novel Lesters, but admits to 39 years at the registrar's office. Finally, they get the marriage licenseand the anxious Dude gets to drive the automobile again. Dude incessantly sounds the car horn whenever he gets behind the steering wheel to drive off somewhere. Over the course of the next two days, the automobile slowly gets wrecked May There be a Road: A Novel and more. First there is an accident with a wagon in which they end up killing the negro driver, and then Dude drives into a stump. The engine irreparably becomes damaged by being run without enough oil. On top of this, they sell the spare tire and wheel for three dollars in order to pay for gasoline, food, and a night at a disreputable hotel where Bessie willingly gets prostituted from room to room by the manager. Some days later Bessie refuses to let Jeeter ride in her car anymore, which makes him upset to the point of kicking her off the land. When she physically attacks him, Ada and Jeeter proceed to beat Bessie and poke her with sticks until she and Dude take off in May There be a Road: A Novel car. Lov runs down to see Jeeter, and asks him if he knows what happened to Pearl, who had run away to Augusta to be free of Lov and the bleak and desperate country life surrounding her. Jeeter notes that more than a few of his daughters have run away to the city. Lov departs and Caldwell reflects on Jeeter's position as a tenant farmer in the South. Even though Jeeter, like so many others around him, had the urge to plant a crop during this time of the year, May There be a Road: A Novel was nothing he could do. His landlord was an absentee who abandoned Jeeter and the rest of those who had lived on his land and given him shares of their crop in exchange for credit for seeds and fertilizer. The stores in the city would not grant any more credit to Jeeter or any of the other farmers May There be a Road: A Novel it was too risky and there were too many asking for it. Jeeter sets a fire to burn off broom sedge and hopes somehow to find enough credit to farm his land that spring. As Jeeter and Ada sleep, sparks from the fire ignite the shingles of their house, which burns to the ground, killing them in their sleep. As the novel closes, Dude makes his first mention of working: He voices the same thoughts of plowing the Lester land that Jeeter had expressed throughout the story, indicating that the vicious cycle in which poor Southern farmers such as the Lesters are trapped continues. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Life14 August Chosen in collaboration with the magazine's editors. Erskine Caldwell works. You Have Seen Their Faces American Folkways series. Margaret Bourke-White second wife. Namespaces Article Talk. Views Read Edit View history. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file. Download as PDF Printable version. | First Edition Books

They were redeemed by her style — always precise and deft and lyrical. The Forgotten Waltzabout the fallout from an affair, cemented her reputation as the leading chronicler of contemporary Irish life without quite reaching the heights of its predecessor. Now we have The Green Roadwhich is very much of a part with her previous two novels, dealing with the shabby materialism of the Celtic tiger generation, with the Irish diaspora, with family. There is always someone who has been interfered with, as a child. There is always a colossal success, with several houses in various countries to which no one is ever invited. There is a mysterious sister. These are just trends, of course, and, like trends, they shift. Because our families contain everything and, late at night, everything makes sense. We pity our mothers, what they had to put up with in bed or in the kitchen, and we hate them or we worship them, but we always cry for them. Like The Gatheringthe May There be a Road: A Novel hinges on a reunion — the family coming together for Christmas for the first time in years. Of the children, only Constance has remained in their anonymous home town in west Clare, the others flung far across May There be a Road: A Novel globe. Rosaleen, it seems, is thinking of cashing in on the Irish property boom the year isbefore the bank runs and the bailouts. This Christmas may be their last chance to celebrate together in the family home. We see Dan in the May There be a Road: A Novel York art scene of the s, a wonderful chapter that glows with nostalgia and feeling. We meet Constance ina mother of young children, dealing with the small joys and disappointments of her circumscribed life. Finally we find Emmet, an aid worker in Mali, endlessly drifting. The novel then leaps ahead to show us the four children all older, all damaged. It draws the reader into the story, making us imaginative co-conspirators in the creation of its fictional world. In many ways, The Green Road works best if we think of it as a series of short stories Enright is feted in the shorter form. Phone orders min. Topics Anne Enright The Observer. Fiction reviews. Reuse this content. Order by newest oldest recommendations. Show 25 25 50 All. Threads collapsed expanded unthreaded. Loading comments… Trouble loading? Most popular.