About this item

From the acclaimed author of the classics Shiloh and Other Stories and In Country comes a beautifully crafted and profoundly moving novel which follows a woman as she looks back over her life and her first love.Ann Workman is smart but nave, a misfit who's traveled from rural Kentucky to graduate school in the transformative years of the late 1960s. While Ann fervently seeks higher learning, she wants what all girls yearn for - a boyfriend. But not any boy. She wants the "Real Thing," to be in love with someone who loves her equally. Then Jimmy appears, as if by magic. Although he comes from a very different place, upper-middle class suburban Chicago, he is a misfit too, a rebel who rejects his upbringing and questions everything. Ann and Jimmy bond through music and literature and their own quirkiness, diving headfirst into what seems to be a perfect relationship.



About the Author

Bobbie Ann Mason

Bobbie Ann Mason was raised on her family's dairy farm in western Kentucky. In childhood, she wrote imitations of the mystery series novels she read and was inspired by Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women" to want to become a writer herself, but it wasn't until college that she discovered other writers, especially the fiction of Hemingway, Salinger, and Fitzgerald.Bobbie Ann Mason's first short stories were published in The New Yorker, during the 1980s renaissance of the short story, when writers such as Raymond Carver, Ann Beattie, and Tobias Wolff came to prominence. Her first book of fiction, "Shiloh & Other Stories," (1982) won the PEN/Hemingway Award and was nominated for the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. She received an Arts and Letters Award for Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.The title story, "Shiloh," about a disabled trucker whose wife is not used to having him at home, has been widely anthologized in college textbooks. The couple's trip to the Civil War battleground of Shiloh began for Mason a recurring preoccupation with the theme of war.Her first novel, "In Country," (1985) is taught widely in classes and was made into a Norman Jewison film starring Bruce Willis and Emily Lloyd. It is about a teenager whose father died in Vietnam before she was born. She is coming of age, now desperate to know more about her father.Mason's newest novel, "Dear Ann," returns to the Vietnam War as the looming background of a love story in the turbulent sixties. Her previous novel, "The Girl in the Blue Beret," ventures into World War II and the ways it is remembered. Mason's memoir, "Clear Springs," about an American farm family throughout the twentieth century, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Her book of linked stories, "Nancy Culpepper," is inspired by this family, and she says that while the circumstances are different, this is the work of fiction most closely identified with her own life and sensibility.She is former writer-in-residence at the University of Kentucky.



Read Next Recommendation

Report incorrect product information.