The Trial of Martin Ross explained

The Trial of Martin Ross
Author:Alfred Kern
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:W.W. Norton & Company
Release Date:1971
Media Type:Print (hardback)
Pages:222 pp
Isbn:0-393-08637-2
Dewey:813/.5/4
Congress:PZ4.K4 Tr PS3561.E57
Oclc:138122
Preceded By:Made in U.S.A.

The Trial of Martin Ross is a novel by the American writer Alfred Kern.[1]

It is set in the late 1960s over Thanksgiving weekend in Buchanan, Pennsylvania (a fictionalized Meadville, north of Pittsburgh). Martin Ross and his wife Janet celebrate the holiday alone and for the first time without their three children, now grown. As a storm dumps a heavy snow, Ross, a liberal lawyer in a conservative town, reads the proofs of his son's first novel, set in a fictionalized Buchanan. Quickly he realizes the novel is an indictment of himself and his life's work, and he struggles to defend himself to his son across the generational chasm.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Alfred Kern, Contemporary Authors Online, Detroit: Thomson Gale, 2002.
  2. The Trial of Martin Ross, Publishers Weekly, 1971.