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The Dean's List [Hardcover]

Jon Hassler (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 20, 1997
The New York Times Book Review called Jon Hassler's last novel, Rookery Blues, "one of his finest and funniest novels." Now, Hassler brings back the delightful hero from that novel. He's older, not necessarily wiser, and still fumbling with love and life amid the strange campus doings of the 1990s.

Leland Edwards, a piano-playing, fly-fishing English professor, has become Dean of Rookery State College. And since the president of the college has been on automatic pilot for the last thirty years, it falls to Leland to save his beloved campus from diminished enrollment, hockey thuggery, and its ignoble associations with Paul Bunyan.

Then his old pal from the Icejam Quartet, Peggy Benoit Connor, drops a fund-raising plum in his lap. The most famous poet in America, Richard Falcon, has agreed to come to Rookery. Leland envisions thousands coming from all over the Midwest to hear Falcon's reading--an event that will put Rookery State on the literary map.

But when he arrives, the poet is both more and  less than what Leland expected. Their relationship leads Leland back to memories of the father he lost when he was fourteen--and on a wild ride that will compel him to harbor a fugitive, stand up to his domineering mother, and finally make peace with his brief attempt at love and the tragedy that ensued.

Like old friends past and present, Leland and his cronies come alive to amuse, provoke, and ultimately surprise us with their touching, complicated humanity. Once again, Jon Hassler has written a novel that shows that is he one of the most gifted authors working today.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Readers of Jon Hassler's Rookery Blues will remember Leland Edwards as a high-spirited young English professor and jazz pianist who, with like-minded fellow academics, formed a quartet called Icejam in 1969. In Hassler's latest novel, The Dean's List, Leland is 25 years older and a much sadder man. Now the dean of Rookery State College, a mediocre institution in northern Minnesota, Leland finds his administrative duties and his dying mother shouldering out what little energy or time he has for music. But if Leland Edwards has given up his dreams of a jazz career, he still has some hopes for his reputation as an academic. When a famous elderly poet, Richard Falcon, comes to Rookery State to work on what he hopes will be his final masterpiece, Leland sees an opportunity to put himself and his institution on the map.

The Dean's List is more melancholy than its predecessor. Still, Jon Hassler's inimitable style, his flair for character, and his well-limned portraits of Minnesota and its people lighten the shadow of gloom that hangs over Rookery State College this year.

From Library Journal

In this sequel to Rookery Blues (LJ 6/1/95), Hassler revisits Rookery State College in Minnesota some 30 years later. Leland Edwards, one of the faculty in the first book, is now dean of the college. In spite of growing older and more successful, however, he is still striving to understand his family and friends, tentatively exploring new relationships, and often simply trying to survive the follies of campus life in the 1990s. These are not easy tasks since he has complex ties to his dependent mother and his ex-wife. Additionally, he is constantly beset by academic Philistines who are more concerned with finances than education. Using both humor and affection, Hassler has developed quirky, eccentric, but believable characters to bedevil Leland and entertain the reader. In doing so, he has succeeded in portraying the small gains and losses that make up daily life for most people. Recommended for most contemporary fiction collections.?Barbara E. Kemp, SUNY at Albany
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 396 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books; 1st edition (May 20, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345416376
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345416377
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 5.6 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,720,642 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another enjoyable novel from Mr. Hassler, April 1, 1999
By A Customer
Mr. Hasslers's books are always a treat to read, and this one is no exception. He combines humor and wry observation to amuse us, while at the same time making us think about the serious matters in life. Comparisons to Russo's Straight Man and Smiley's Moo are inevitable. Dean's List struck me as less humorous than these two novels but still had plenty of humor. As always Hassler excells with characterization, although I thought the college president too stupid to be real (at least I hope so). The characters from the retirement center were superb. I would not hesitate to recommend this book to anyone who enjoys intelligent fiction. All five of the Hassler novels I have read so far have been wonderful. North of Hope continues to be my personal favorite.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Find a comfortable chair, put up your feet, and enjoy!, July 11, 2000
This review is from: The Dean's List (Hardcover)
There's a comfortable "old-shoeness" to picking up a Hassler novel. One doesn't read Hassler primarily for the plots, though they are sometimes dramatic and always include a grande finale. Rather, one reads him for his wry depictions of ordinary humans and for his gentle, but trenchant observations about midwestern, middleclass, or academic life. The Dean's List is a sequel to Rookery Blues, and it is helpful, but not necessary, to have read that.

Though the plot line here is not as insistent as in some of his other novels, one doesn't really care. Who can read this book and not be amused by characters like Dot, "traumatized in...youth by the Great Depression," a woman who "hangs up her used paper towels to dry." The annual fund-raiser dinner at the Hi-Rise housing for the elderly is a classic-- collecting funds to build rest room facilities on the main floor so that residents "caught short" won't have to go upstairs to their apartments to find relief. Lolly Edwards's planning and attending her own full-blown wake so that she can see her friends and out-of-town relatives and hear all her eulogies is so remarkable one wonders why more people don't do it! I loved every minute of this book.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Minnesota Blues, October 12, 1998
I have not read Hassler's "Rookery Blues," but after finishing "Dean's List" this morning, I plan to start "Blues" by nightfall. Hassler's story stays with you even when you're not reading him--the mark of a good writer. Although much of the book is suffused with a melancholic, wintry mood, it is also greatly funny at times. The malapropic hockey coach is particularly hilarious. On the down side, there may be just a few too many extended-family characters than necessary, and it is hard to believe that the protagonist, approaching 60 years of age, is genuinely such a "mama's boy"! Also, the protagonist's second marriage at the end seems a little forced, as we learned comparatively little about his new wife during the main part of the book. On the plus side, Hassler's story keeps the reader involved, and his inclusion of poems by the fictional, aging poet, Robert Falcon, adds a nice touch of realism. I would also truly love to see hordes of people come out to see a beloved poet, as happens in the book. In short, "Dean's List" is engaging without being overwrought. I'd especially recommend it for anyone who is or has been in academia in the 1990s. Hassler, much like Richard Russo in "Straight Man," manages to poke fun at higher education while also eliciting a certain amount of respect for it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
I JOT THIS IN my pocket notebook as President O.F. Zastrow and his guest exchange their tedious thoughts on the subject of celebrities. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
human rights officer, hockey arena, old rector
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mary Sue, Richard Falcon, Rookery State, Aunt Mary, President Zastrow, Johnny Hancock, Father Pyle, Worthington Pyle, Uncle Bill, Ernie Burr, Francine Phillips, Nettie Firehammer, Portis Bridges, Fording the Bee, Heim's Beer, New Hampshire, Faith Crowninshield, Kimberly Kraft, Owl Brook, Addison Steele, Angelo Corelli, Coach Hokanson, Dean Edwards, Father Tisdale, Peggy Benoit
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