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The World in the Attic

Published
Apr 1971
Main Genre
Literary Literary
Pages
200

About This Book

Wright Morris's "Nebraska Trilogy" (1946-49) embodies his attempt to capture and come to terms with his past. According to David Madden, in his study Wright Morris, "In The Inhabitants [a picture collection] the emphasis is on the artifacts inhabited and on the land; in The Home Place [narrative and pictures], on the inhabitants themselves; and in The World in the Attic, on what the land and the people signify to one man, Clyde Muncy, writer and self-exiled Nebraskan. . . . What was only suggested to Muncy in The Home Place is further developed, although not entirely resolved, in The World in the Attic. . . . [In it], Morris achieves the kind of objective conceptualization that is characteristic of his best novels. The first half of the book is impressionistic, a series of reminiscences like The Home Place; but the second half has a novelist narrative line. In The Home Place, the past, saturated in the immediate present, is merely alluded to. In The World in the Attic, however, the past is specifically and dramatically related to the present."

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Paperback

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Trade Paperback
Mar 1971 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0803257295
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Hardcover

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Hardcover
May 1978 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0803230532
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Sep 2022 Nebraska ISBN 1496203410
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Sep 2022 -- Not Selected ISBN B0BDTTVQ89
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