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Paperback The School on Heart's Content Road Book

ISBN: 0802144152

ISBN13: 9780802144157

The School on Heart's Content Road

(Part of the Egypt, Maine (#4) Series and Heart's Content (#1) Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Carolyn Chute's newest paperback returns to her beloved town of Egypt, Maine and delivers a rousing, politically charged portrait of those living on the margins of our society. The School on Heart's Content Road begins with Mickey Gammon, a fifteen-year-old dropout who has been evicted from home and seeks shelter in the Settlementa rural cooperative in alternative energy, farm produce, and local goods, founded by "the Prophet." Falsely demonized by...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

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I lack the time to seriously review this work. This story is the first of five parts of a much larger work Carolyn has been developing over the course of several years, and it is one of the best tales i've read in a long time. The School on Heart's Content Road will appeal to anyone who's the slightest bit suspicious of programming, indoctrination, mainstream media, law, or the false dichotomies of left vs. right. The story is told through the eyes of many familiar characters (birds, television, and other people) as well as those with moral positions not generally considered socially acceptable. As such, the story is not some sort of preachy politicized treatise as a dignified celebration of love and the rebellious tendencies of those who don't feel right about the way our culture experiences life, and does so in a gentle, entertaining way. When you read, dig out the journal where you log memorable expressions and quotes-- you'll need some free pages. If you don't have one, start today. This series is unlike anything Carolyn has ever written, and should be read by young and old alike, regardless of political/ religious inclination. At least, every teenager should be given a copy of this book, because no matter how significant, the public school system or NYT bestseller list will never put it on their reading lists, because it could be considered (gasp) substantive and meaningful.

When's her next book coming out???

I loved the School on Heart's Content Road. It had been a long time since I had read her earlier books (the Egypt series) and I think Carolyn Chute has begun a great series with this latest title. It's been said that it started out as a too-long 2000 page story, and she was able to publish it only because she figured out a way to break it down into 5 books, and for me, the next one cannot come out soon enough. As a reader familiar with the poor and rural Maine landscape, I can appreciate the simple life she recreates at the Settlement and with the extended St. Onge family. Though I disagree with Chute's politics, it's hard not to appreciate the hopelessness that comes out of poverty, especially when presented through the main character Mickey in this book. Touching and heartbreaking.

One of the best writers that ever walked the face of Earth

Mrs. Chute is one of the best writers that ever walked the face of Earth. This is a great book in "The Great Books" sense of the word. It's rich and full and, amazing things seem to happen on every page. Take Rembrandt and Velasquez and Dickens and Tolstoy and have them create a portrait of Western Maine. That will give some idea of what this book like. Mrs. Chute, however, is very upset that people cannot be farmers the way they were in the Nineteenth Century. Mrs. Chute is a brilliant writer but she is angry. I don't agree with her politics and she doesn't agree with mine. I hope she doesn't mind if I think she has written one of the greatest series of books ever. Whether or not you agree with Mrs. Chute's politics everyone needs to read all of her books.

Maine, away from the lighthouses and lobsters

"The School on Heart's Content Road," Carolyn Chute's fifth novel, is set, like her first novel ("The Beans of Egypt, Maine") in the kind of small, rural inland community that can be found just about anywhere in Maine. It is a Maine mostly unknown to the summer tourists who populate the coast. Chute's Egypt, modeled loosely on a small western Maine town like Parsonsfield or Porter (the area where she lives with her husband), has an IGA supermarket, not a giant Hannaford's or Shaw's, and its back roads contain an assortment of decaying farmsteads, tidy ranch houses, and mobile homes. In this setting Chute places a utopian community, the Settlement, headed by the charismatic Gordon St. Onge, a man whose frailties and relationships bring to mind other American experiments in communal living: Brook Farm, Oneida, New Harmony. The Settlement is home to a range of vividly drawn characters, including "Secret Agent Jane," a child who has lost her mother to prison, and Mickey Gammon, a 15 year old homeless boy who lives in a tree and is drawn to two competing militias, the Border Mountain Militia and the True Maine militia, the first run by angry men, the second by a group of idealistic Settlement teenagers. Chute's narrative voice in "The School on Heart's Content Road" is an omniscient one, with little symbols (a crow, a cloud, a TV set and so on) marking each voice, a device that seems at first like an affectation but grows on you. Through these voices, with affection, anger, and despair, she depicts the face of rural Maine poverty and the grinding forces ("corporatism" is a word she uses a lot) that make it impossible for ordinary people to live decent lives. This novel is more furious and more polemical than "The Beans of Egypt, Maine," but it is also more lyrical in its evocation of the weedy green summer lushness of the western Maine hills and of the people who live there. Chute has the author's equivalent of perfect pitch for the way her Maine characters look and sound, including the French-accented speech one still encounters just about anywhere. I know that Chute is sometimes compared to Faulkner, but there is no landed gentry in her part of the world, no Sartoris looking backward, no Snopes on the make. Instead, there is just Egypt, a little community that has always been a bit of a backwater, and its utopian, rather 19th century reinvention in the form of the self-sufficient Settlement on Heart's Content Road, where the inhabitants experiment with solar and wind energy, tap the maple trees, take in every lost soul, and fend off reporters looking for a sensational story to lead the evening news. Chute's voice is deeply, truly a Maine one, but the residents of Egypt, mostly overlooked except when when it is useful to exploit them, could be living just about anywhere in America.

Review of School on Heart's Content Road

Carolyn Chute's book, The School on Heart's Content Road is a wonderful book that's a slice of life that leaves the reader wondering what will happen next for the hero and heroine. I am hoping the author will write the sequel soon and tell us more about all the characters she has created for us. I highly recommend this novel and others she has written.
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