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OverviewThis collection of essays explores the life of the author, from her Depression-era childhood in Tennessee to her adolescence in the Hill Country of Texas, from life as a small town cheerleader to life as a world-traveling author, from the child of a hard scrabble farmer to that of a semi-retired rancher. Like the main character in her interconnected and often autobiographical short stories, Osborn is extremely curious about her occasionally eccentric family, yet she must continually accept the mysteries of reality -- a mother locked away for clinical depression, country neighbors who appear to live on nothing, the eternal balance of caring deeply for an unforgiving Texas Hill Country landscape while traveling the world from Europe to the Galapagos. Aware of the need for family mythology, she often mines family history (one of her forebears followed Daniel Boone over the Cumberland Gap and was an early settler in Tennessee, and his flintlock rifle hangs in Osborn's living room) and her own distinctly Southern background that witnesses a fading 19th-century morality, readily accepts individual eccentricity, and celebrates storytelling as a way of understanding the world. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Carolyn OsbornPublisher: Wings Press Imprint: Wings Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.372kg ISBN: 9781609405441ISBN 10: 1609405447 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 30 September 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsWhen the memory of the wartime generation of mid-20th century America will be washed away by official histories, Carolyn Osborn's detailed, vivid and unforgettable remembering, will be the go-to source for the feeling of that epoch. --Andrei Codrescu, author, The Art of Forgetting: New Poems DURATIONS, Carolyn Osborn's collection of a memoir and essays, begins in the green hills of Tennessee and ends in Texas's drought-plagued Hill Country. The author's childhood was shaken up by the multiple displacements brought on by World War II and the cataclysm of her young mother's mental illness and hospitalization, concealed from Osborn and her younger brother, who knew only that their mother was gone. DURATIONS is a testament to familial love and caring, to survival, and to the unexpected blooming of a good life. Osborn's wry essays on her travels and her slow love affair with ranch life round out DURATIONS and make it is an engrossing, satisfying, and rewarding book from one of Texas's best writers. --Laura Furman, series editor, The O. Henry Prize Stories It is not easy to look back over eight decades and reflect on one’s life in an insightful, informative way that might be meaningful to other people. Carolyn Osborn has done so very, very well.... Her descriptions of the social dynamics of a small Texas town going through growing pains in the post-World War II boom brought on by the development of Fort Hood are fascinating as well. As a poignant portrait of human adaptability and resilience in the face of extraordinary loss and change, Durations cannot but captivate the reader."" — Ed Conroy, San Antonio Express-News It is not easy to look back over eight decades and reflect on one's life in an insightful, informative way that might be meaningful to other people. Carolyn Osborn has done so very, very well.... Her descriptions of the social dynamics of a small Texas town going through growing pains in the post-World War II boom brought on by the development of Fort Hood are fascinating as well. As a poignant portrait of human adaptability and resilience in the face of extraordinary loss and change, Durations cannot but captivate the reader. --Ed Conroy, San Antonio Express-News Durations is a memoir of having two mothers and being an 'Army brat' frequently on the move from one military posting to another during World War II. Meanwhile, the personal essays that form the final chapters of Durations also deal with family, travels and the challenges of running a ranch in Central Texas. Her engrossing new book can inspire others who struggle to compose family memoirs and keep discovering that even the simplest lives can be full of complexities. [She] skillfully keeps the book focused on how love and family can help people survive drastic changes and how good lives can rise again from the pain of what has had to be left behind. --Si Dunn, Dallas Morning News Osborn shares a sometimes-lonely childhood where her aunts fill in the gaps of her motherless existence by introducing her to books, sending her to dancing lessons, and teaching her how to ride a horse. The matter-of-fact tone of the book reflects the strong character of a culture in wartime America and evokes a certain nostalgia . . . . In the end, I found myself wishing the memoir were longer and wanting to know more about Carolyn Osborn's life as a young woman in Texas. Still, Durations is a window to a time few can remember and a poignant portrait of the American South during World War II. --Christine Baleshta, storycirclebookreviews.org When the memory of the wartime generation of mid-20th century America will be washed away by official histories, Carolyn Osborn's detailed, vivid and unforgettable remembering, will be the go-to source for the feeling of that epoch. --Andrei Codrescu, author, The Art of Forgetting: New Poems DURATIONS, Carolyn Osborn's collection of a memoir and essays, begins in the green hills of Tennessee and ends in Texas's drought-plagued Hill Country. The author's childhood was shaken up by the multiple displacements brought on by World War II and the cataclysm of her young mother's mental illness and hospitalization, concealed from Osborn and her younger brother, who knew only that their mother was gone. DURATIONS is a testament to familial love and caring, to survival, and to the unexpected blooming of a good life. Osborn's wry essays on her travels and her slow love affair with ranch life round out DURATIONS and make it is an engrossing, satisfying, and rewarding book from one of Texas's best writers. --Laura Furman, series editor, The O. Henry Prize Stories Osborn shares a sometimes-lonely childhood where her aunts fill in the gaps of her motherless existence by introducing her to books, sending her to dancing lessons, and teaching her how to ride a horse. The matter-of-fact tone of the book reflects the strong character of a culture in wartime America and evokes a certain nostalgia . . . . In the end, I found myself wishing the memoir were longer and wanting to know more about Carolyn Osborn's life as a young woman in Texas. Still, Durations is a window to a time few can remember and a poignant portrait of the American South during World War II. --Christine Baleshta, storycirclebookreviews.org When the memory of the wartime generation of mid-20th century America will be washed away by official histories, Carolyn Osborn's detailed, vivid and unforgettable remembering, will be the go-to source for the feeling of that epoch. --Andrei Codrescu, author, The Art of Forgetting: New Poems DURATIONS, Carolyn Osborn's collection of a memoir and essays, begins in the green hills of Tennessee and ends in Texas's drought-plagued Hill Country. The author's childhood was shaken up by the multiple displacements brought on by World War II and the cataclysm of her young mother's mental illness and hospitalization, concealed from Osborn and her younger brother, who knew only that their mother was gone. DURATIONS is a testament to familial love and caring, to survival, and to the unexpected blooming of a good life. Osborn's wry essays on her travels and her slow love affair with ranch life round out DURATIONS and make it is an engrossing, satisfying, and rewarding book from one of Texas's best writers. --Laura Furman, series editor, The O. Henry Prize Stories It is not easy to look back over eight decades and reflect on one's life in an insightful, informative way that might be meaningful to other people. Carolyn Osborn has done so very, very well.... Her descriptions of the social dynamics of a small Texas town going through growing pains in the post-World War II boom brought on by the development of Fort Hood are fascinating as well. As a poignant portrait of human adaptability and resilience in the face of extraordinary loss and change, Durations cannot but captivate the reader. - Ed Conroy, San Antonio Express-News Author InformationCarolyn Osborn graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a B.J. degree in 1955, and an M.A. in 1959. She has won awards from P.E.N., the Texas Institute of Letters, and a Distinguished Prose Award from The Antioch Review (2003). Her stories have been included in The O. Henry Prize Stories (Doubleday, 1991) and Lone Star Literature (Norton, 2003), among numerous other anthologies. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |