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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Richard RhodesPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Edition: 10th Anniversary edition Dimensions: Width: 14.90cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.10cm Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9780700610389ISBN 10: 0700610383 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 30 April 2000 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of print, replaced by POD ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufatured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews<i>A Hole in the World</i> must be read through tears the reader's and the writer's and it must be acknowledged as powerful a bearing of witness, as dark a story of cruelty, as redemptive a proclamation of the soul's strength as we have been given in a very long time. Nothing by the prolific and talented Rhodes prepares us for this shattering testimony. Frederick Busch, <i>Los Angeles Times</i> Unlike too much of what is offered for public edification (and titillation) in this our age of confession, A Hole in the World comes straight from the heart with no apparent self-serving motives. Richard Rhodes is here to tell us three things, all of them important and useful. The first is that it is dangerous and self-deluding to sentimentalize a myth of idyllic American childhood. The second is that a child caught in a hell not of his own making must devise strategies for survival and must cry out for help; there are others, outsiders, ready to provide it. The third--and to those caught in their own torment the most important--is that it is possible to escape, to rise above hurt and rage, to live a life that is useful and good. A timely contribution to the literature of a problem we are only beginning to understand. --Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post. <i>A Hole in the World</i> must be read through tears--the reader's and the writer's--and it must be acknowledged as powerful a bearing of witness, as dark a story of cruelty, as redemptive a proclamation of the soul's strength as we have been given in a very long time. Nothing by the prolific and talented Rhodes prepares us for this shattering testimony. --Frederick Busch, <i>Los Angeles Times</i> Another stunning work by the Pulitzer Prize-winning Rhodes - this one an account of his personal triumph over a childhood of deprivation and abuse. When I was thirteen months old, my mother killed herself, Rhodes begins. Too young to comprehend her suicide, Rhodes nevertheless became aware of a yawning emptiness that he later described as a hole in the world. Rhodes and his brother, Stanley, spent the next nine years in a series of Kansas City boardinghouses with their father until he remarried and the brothers' world was shattered again. Their new stepmother so passionately resented the boys' presence that she begrudged their every bite of food, made them sleep in a concrete storeroom behind their apartment, and barred them from the house until dark. Rhodes and his brother spent their days rummaging through trash cans for food, loitering in shops to escape the winter's cold, and wandering the underground sewer pipes to kill time until they were allowed back inside the house. Half-starved, adrift, and a fanatic devotee of heroic comic books and science fiction, Rhodes was at last placed in the Andrew Drumm Institute, where neglected boys raised their own crops, butchered their own livestock, and were encouraged to take responsibility for their lives. Thirty years have passed since Rhodes escaped Missouri via a scholarship to Yale. Yet only after having indulged his fascination with the ultimate hole in the world (The Making of the Atomci Bomb, 1986), and revisited the environment in which he came of age (Farm), is he able to confront, in this intimate, scrupulously honest account, the irretrievable loss of his childhood. I was saving the story for fiction, Rhodes confesses, a red giant set somewhere neat' the end of the world, something Wagnerian. It is a tribute to his unerring instincts as a writer that this a cappella nonfiction version proves so much more terrifying and transformative. (Kirkus Reviews) A Hole in the World must be read through tears--the reader's and the writer's--and it must be acknowledged as powerful a bearing of witness, as dark a story of cruelty, as redemptive a proclamation of the soul's strength as we have been given in a very long time. Nothing by the prolific and talented Rhodes prepares us for this shattering testimony. --Frederick Busch, Los Angeles Times Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |