About St. Vinnie's Charitable Books Oregon, United States
Biblio member since 2020
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This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
St. Vincent de Paul Society of Lane County is a 501c3 charity based in Eugene Oregon. We serve at risk, homeless and low income populations in communities throughout Oregon. 100% of your purchase goes directly to help serve people in need by supporting our emergency homeless services, low income housing, or services for veterans, the elderly, and many other specialty programs helping those who need it most. We appreciate your business.
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30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.
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Media reviews
"Mr. Harrigan is a confident dramatist, skillfully jumping from one point of view to another without disrupting the flow of the scenes. [And] by devising a novel about the art of memorialization, he has crafted a poignantly human monument to our history."—Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"A superior piece of storytelling, a historical novel, a Texas saga, an allegory of art and all the important issues it can raise, an onion of a book with many leathery layers to be unpeeled, eventually revealing our vast capacity to love, and to hurt the ones we love, and to forgive."—Steve Bennett, San Antonio Express
"It’s not too early to anoint Remember Ben Clayton as one of the best novels of 2011. . . . Skillfully composed, emotionally engaging, the story (set just after World War I ends) of a Texas rancher trying to reclaim his son by the commission of statue is alternately heartbreaking and uplifting. Like Ian McEwan’s Atonement and Michael Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, Harrigan magically re-creates a point in history while engaging readers with a mesmerizing story."—Rege Behe, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
“Stephen Harrigan ranks among the finest atmospheric novelists. [In his new novel], set just a few years after World War I, he takes full advantage of the opportunity to conjure amazing scenes ranging from frontier Comanche raids to doomed Allied charges on German strongholds. …Yet atmospherics aren’t even the apex of Harrigan’s art. As with his previously lauded The Gates of the Alamo and Challenger Park, in Remember Ben Clayton the author is only using vividly re-created history as a framework for probing the complexities of human relationships. …
“Simply put, storytelling does not get any better than this.” —Jeff Guinn, Dallas Morning News
“A young Texan is killed World War I, and his stoically grieving father commissions a statue to honor him . . . but like the unforgiving bullets that pierce Clayton’s flesh, the story goes unflinchingly deeper into the human failings of fathers, the need for children to forgive and what it means to create art. …With Remember Ben Clayton, Harrigan has created art.” —Joe O’Connell, Austin American Statesman
“A heartening novel about art, war, and the tug of family relationships.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Like the statue at its center, Harrigan’s novel is a stunning work of art resting on a solid base of heartbreak. The action ranges from the Texas plains to the devastated northern French landscape, with the presence of the violent Wild West strongly lingering. . . . The story builds with determined momentum, providing a grimly vivid sense of place and deep insight into the creative process and family relationships. Harrigan’s The Gates of the Alamo has become a modern classic, and his latest deserves similar acclaim.”—Sarah Johnson, Booklist (starred)
“If it were possible to give Stephen Harrigan’s novel six stars, I would. I have not been able to stop thinking about Remember Ben Clayton since putting it down a final time. It is so moving, with a kind of West Texas majesty that reminds us of what the west was like not that long ago. And it is readable—compulsively so. I was a huge fan of Harrigan’s earlier Gates of the Alamo so I was aware of his writer’s skill. Ben Clayton is even more nuanced and complex. . . . My favorite book this year.”—Candace Siegle, Goodreads
“I read the first chapter and I was hooked . . . The prose is sparse and reminds me of Hemingway, but it fit the characters perfectly. The musings of the characters on art and its role in society—and what it means to the individual artist—were exceptionally absorbing. . . . This novel should appeal to a wide audience—fans of cowboy lit, fans of historical fiction, and artists of all stripes.”—Chiron, Rabbit Reader