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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Origin of the Plantation Tradition in American Letters, February 14, 2000
This review is from: In Ole Virginia: Or, Marse Chan and Other Stories (Southern Classics Series) (Paperback)
Although the dialect rendering of Black English in these short stories may offend today's delicate politcal sensibilities, the reader should bear in mind that these stories were written in another century for a different audience. Get past that, and you have pure Plantation Tradition - the same tradition that inspired Margaret Mitchell and disgusted William Faulkner, James Branch Cabell, and Ellen Glasgow. The stories are simple, sincere and guaranteed to elicit emotion. Marse Chan is an American Classic, and No Haid Pawn has been likened to a tale of Poe. Get this, read it, and if you don't see life in Ante-bellum Virginia as it was, you can see it as Page thought it should have been.
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In Ole Virginia: Or, Marse Chan and Other Stories (Southern Classics Series)
In Ole Virginia: Or, Marse Chan and Other Stories (Southern Classics Series) by Thomas Nelson Page (Paperback - December 15, 1991)
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