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The
Ozark Trilogy
New Edition
Suzette Haden Elgin
An intelligent fantasy that explains, satirizes, and delights in
Ozark life and language.
The Ozark Trilogy (previously published in 1981, Doubleday) is a widely
acclaimed fantasy/science fiction story with, as the title suggests, very strong
ties to the Ozark region. Twelve Fair Kingdoms, The Grand Jubilee, And Then
There'll Be Fireworksthe books that comprise the trilogychronicle
life on the planet Ozark and its Confederation of Continents, which are appropriately
named Arkansaw, Oklahomah, Mizzurah, Tinaseeh, Kintucky, and Marktwain. However,
the story told here involves much more than a mere transplant of Ozark culture
and heritage onto a new planet. While this new Ozark culture maintains and
even intensifies many of the "real" Ozark traditions and customs (for instance, "Grannys" hold
significant, stabilizing social roles and are important sources of wisdom),
the planet Ozark combines many new, fantastical elements with traditional ways.
Mules on Ozark fly, and the wise "Grannys" also work magic.
The protagonist of The Ozark Trilogy, Responsible of Brightwater,
appears at the center of Ozark society, a society she must save
from evil magic, civil war, and, ultimately, alien invasion. As
Responsible travels from continent to continent in an attempt to
discover and squelch the evil magic and calm the civil unrest,
we are witness to many dangerous and sometimes comical adventures
along the way, including a spectacular flying Mule crash and a
magic duel with a Granny gone bad.
Elgin has created a fantastic world infused with the folk traditions,
social and familial hierarchies, and traditional dialect of the
Ozarks. While parallels might be drawn between, for example, the
break-up of the Confederacy of Continents on planet Ozark and the
American Civil War, Elgin comments on aspects of Ozark history
and tradition in a non didactic way. The trilogy, with its strong
heroine and witty engagement of tradition, is a classic of Ozark
literature.
"Magic abounds in this tale of 12 mountain families who left
Earth to settle the planet Ozark. . . . Elgin has created a delightful
world built around Ozark folklore, where science and magic are
expertly combined and the characters are delineated with a few
pungent words. Highly recommended."
Library Journal
2000
6"x 9"
520 pages
$30.00 paper
1-55728-592-6
Suzette Haden Elgin lives in Huntsville, Arkansas.
She has a Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of California,
San Diego, and is the author of many other works of fiction
and nonfiction, including The Gentle Art of Verbal Self-Defense (Barnes & Noble).
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