The Land Breakers Explained

Author:John Ehle
Isbn:9-780-060-11170-0
Pub Date:December 1964
Publisher:HarperCollins

The Land Breakers is a 1964 American historical novel by John Ehle. It is the first book in Ehle's seven-volume Appalachian cycle.[1]

Plot

The Land Breakers chronicles the settling of an unnamed, uninhabited, remote Appalachian valley by several pioneering families. The valley is located in mountainous country between Watauga County and the towns of Morganton and Old Fort in western North Carolina. The book’s action takes place from 1779 to 1784 and relates the families’ struggles with harsh weather, wild animals, economic pressures, and interpersonal conflicts.

Characters

Reception

Upon its release, the book received positive reviews from critics for its believable relationships among the characters and its authentic portrayal of life in the American frontier.[2] [3] Hal Borland, in a review for The New York Times, praised Ehle's eloquent writing and dialogue, as well as the dramatic narrative underpinning its exploration of life in the "pioneer past." He wrote that the "story moves—even when it seems to pause for sights and sounds and smells that taunt the senses, even when it deals with herbal lore." Kirkus Reviews wrote that it "reads with the authentic regional sound of a folk song recorded by [Alan] Lomax."

Reprintings and retrospective reviews

The Land Breakers was reissued in 2006 after decades out of print. About the reissue, Harper Lee wrote "John Ehle's meld of historical fact with ineluctable plot-weaving makes The Land Breakers an exciting example of his masterful storytelling. He is our foremost writer of historical fiction."[4] In 2009, Michael Ondaatje wrote of the reissue "The Landbreakers (sic) is a great American novel, way beyond anything most New York literary icons have produced."[5]

The book was reprinted again in November 2014 by New York Review Books. Donna Meredith, in the Southern Literary Review, wrote that the book was a classic and praised its "universal insight into the nature of relationships."[6] B.J. Sedlock reviewed the book for the Historical Novel Society in 2015, noting its use of "simple, spare prose" to convey its central themes of community and survival.[7]

On November 24, 2021, Valerie Stivers published a blog post exploring the historically accurate food of The Land Breakers in The Paris Review.[8]

Notes and References

  1. News: Sandomir . Richard . 2018-04-12 . John Ehle, Who Rooted His Novels in Appalachia, Is Dead at 92 . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-12-03 . 0362-4331.
  2. News: Borland . Hal . Hal Borland . 1964-02-23 . On the Carolina Frontier; THE LAND BREAKERS. By John Ehle. 407 pp. New York and Evanston: Harper & Row. $5.95. . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-12-18 . 0362-4331.
  3. Web site: February 1, 1963 . Book Reviews, Sites, Romance, Fantasy, Fiction . 2022-12-18 . Kirkus Reviews . en.
  4. Web site: 2007-09-28 . "Finding Harper Lee" : News-Record.com : Greensboro, North Carolina . 2022-12-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928010026/http://www.news-record.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061011/NEWSREC010201/610110335/1015 . 2007-09-28 .
  5. News: 2009-12-26 . My Book of the Decade . en-CA . The Globe and Mail . 2022-12-03.
  6. Web site: Meredith . Donna . 2015-03-24 . "The Land Breakers," by John Ehle . 2022-12-18 . Southern Literary Review . en-US.
  7. Web site: The Land Breakers . 2022-12-18 . Historical Novel Society.
  8. Web site: Stivers . Valerie . 2021-11-24 . Thanksgiving with John Ehle . 2022-12-18 . The Paris Review . en.