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The Fields
The Fields
The Fields
Audiobook7 hours

The Fields

Written by Conrad Richter

Narrated by Danny Campbell

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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About this audiobook

The Awakening Land trilogy traces the transformation of a middle-American landscape from wilderness to farmland to the site of modern industrial civilization, all in the lifetime of one character. The trilogy earned author Conrad Richter immense acclaim, ranking him with the greatest of American mid-century novelists. It includes The Trees (1940), The Fields (1946), and The Town (1950) and follows the varied fortunes of Sayward Luckett and her family in southeastern Ohio.

The Fields tells the story of Sayward as a wife and mother, working with her own brood on that hard frontier to create a durable home, and aspects of civilization in a region where life is still difficult and towns are just beginning to appear. It is a rich and human novel about personal conflicts and strife in the midst of a land that itself is striving. And it has an epic quality that perfectly reflects the sweeping conquest of the frontier.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 7, 2020
ISBN9781541431966
The Fields

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Reviews for The Fields

Rating: 4.260869318840579 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

69 ratings8 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Another good one in this trilogy. Old time slang makes it interesting, but sometimes not politically correct anymore. Good story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When we rejoin Sayward Wheeler (nee Luckett), she has given birth to a baby boy she names Resolve. What a cool name for a kid! Sayward is a lonely woman because she has married a hesitant man. Portius ran out on Sayward when it came time to get married. He disappeared when she gave birth to their first son and it took Portius a long time to even acknowledge his first born son, Resolve. Portius was not even part of the baptism ceremony for Resolve. Sayward's sister Genny is the only family she has left in the region. Everyone else has scattered to the wind. Her father left when Jary died and Wyitt only returns from time to time. Sulie is still missing, presumed either dead or held captive by the regional natives. Betrayal follows Sayward but she is a resilient woman. She knows how to fight adversity fair and square.Fast fast forward and now Sayward has had seven children; eight if you could little Sulie who died in a fire. With her brood of children Sayward watches her southern Ohio woodland home stretch into fields of openness with more and more people populating the area. Statehood has been declared and soon there is a need for a meeting house, school, boat launch, grist mill; times are changing. As the trees and animals are cleared out Sayward knows nothing will be the same. A competition grows between the newly established Tateville and Sayward's Moonshine Settlement. With Portius spending more time in town Sayward must chose between society's growing expansion and the comfort of all she has ever known. As an aside, I have always wondered about churches with a graveyard attached. Why the two always seem to go together. It was interesting when the townspeople approached Sayward for her land. The fields are growing into towns and people need a church. Sayward has the most land to offer.As another aside, I found the gluttonous hunting scene a little much: in total the men slaughtered at one time nineteen wolves, twenty-one bears, three panthers ,two hundred and ninety seven deer, and too many raccoon, fox, squirrel, and turkey to count. Richter summed it up well when he wrote of Sayward's brother Wyitt, "He was drunk, that's what he was, drunk on blood and gunpowder" (p 78).
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book, the second in the Awakening Land trilogy, picks up immediately after The Trees ends. It easily could have been crafted at the same time but wasn't. This is not to say that this second in the trilogy does not shift its narrative to more of overview and reflective descriptions and not as much about blow by blow accounts of certain events, compared to The Trees. The plot does move forward, but it seemed to drag more in this volume. The next and last volume is The Town, but I will have to think further before reading it. I'm not expecting it to provide a satisfying climax.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Conrad Richter’s “The Fields” is the second novel of ”The Awakening Land” trilogy, which chronicles changing frontier life in southern Ohio beginning after the American Revolution and lengthening into the Nineteenth Century. Sayward Luckett Wheeler, the novel’s main character -- instinctively wise, competent, emotionally balanced – faces now different challenges. Long gone from her life are her father Worth, the inveterate hunter; her mother Jary, buried so long ago; and two sisters: the child Sulie, taken away by Indians, and the devious Achsa, living in the English Lakes area with her sister Genny’s husband Louie Scurrah. Of Sayward’s siblings only Genny and Wyitt remain. During the time period of “The Fields,” which begins just before Ohio’s statehood is declared in 1803, Sayward -- married to the learned recluse Portius Wheeler at the conclusion of “The Trees” -- gives birth to eight children. The novel concerns itself with Sayward’s experiences as a mother, wife, homemaker, and land owner. It reveals several important experiences of three of Sayward’s older children. It exposes several of Portius’s not always commendable peculiarities. It chronicles the transition of the fledgling river settlement close to Sayward’s property from mostly a trading post establishment to a recognizable, successful town.Specific events mark the transition. Statehood is declared. A township is created, necessitating the listing of property and acreage for taxing purposes. A large community hunt is undertaken to drive wild life out of the woods. A community meeting house is built on a parcel of Sayward’s property. A grain mill is built on the river. A school for boys is constructed. The town of Tateville is created. A locally built keel boat is launched. Toil, self-sacrifice, selfishness, disillusionment, tragedy, and self-discovery companion these events.What engaged me most – not to ignore the novel’s feel of authenticity and depth of knowledge about frontier life at that time in that locality – was the author’s superb use of subjective narration to reveal at certain crisis moments his primary characters’ thoughts and emotions. Here are several examples.Sayward’s fourth child and first daughter Sulie – so bright and engaging, walks on ashes outside the house to impress her brothers. Her dress catches on fire."If she got to be a hundred years old, Sayward told herself, never without her voice breaking could she tell a stranger how it went with their little Sulie that day. How she lay in her bed looking up at them with blackened rims where her eyelashes ought to be. How one minute she had been in this world light and free, and the next the gates of the other world were open and she had to pass through. Already she was where her own mammy couldn’t reach her. She couldn’t even touch grease to that scorched young flesh without Sulie screaming so they could hear her over at the Covenhovens."…"All the time in her mind she could see that little body when she first started to walk. Back and forwards Sulie’s small red dress used to go, her little red arms out to balance. She’d never get a weary. She could go it all day, wraggling and wriggling, skipping and jumping, going hoppity-hoppity, nodding and bobbing, in and out, from one side to another. Did that little mite know, she wondered? Did something tell her she had only a short while in this world, and that’s why she was always on the go, making up for it, cutting one dido after another?"Sayward’s brother Wyitt decides to surrender to his desire to become a full-time hunter. Savoring his participation in the big community hunt to rid the woods of wildlife, he determines he must leave the area, strike out independently."No, never could he go back to corn-hoeing after today. Those black moose they told about and the hairy and naked wild bulls over the big river! He would have to see them and trail them and get them in his sights. Likewise the tiger cat, the striped prairie deer that outran the wind and the big horns that some called mountain rams. … He would send home his share of today’s meat… He would pick up his traps from his line and go. But never would he stop in at Sayward’s, for if he did, he might stay."... Oh, never would he go back to Sayward and Portius now, and yet he hated running off without saying something. Sayward had raised him, you might say. He had fought her plenty and called her names, but most times it turned out she was right. Maybe she was right that those who followed the woods never amounted to much. A farmer could stay in one place and gather plunder, she claimed, but a hunter had to keep following the game. … He knowed she was right. He had knowed it a long time. He had tried to break his self of it. He’d knock the wildness out of him, he said, if it was the last thing he did. He had done his dangdest to kill the ever-hunter in him, but it wouldn’t stay killed. "... They [his nephews] were harder to leave than his full sister, for he took to them, and they to him. Especially Resolve, that tyke was different from his Uncle Wyitt as daylight to night time. For a little feller he was steady as could be. He could even read and write where Wyitt couldn’t sign his own name. He was his uncle’s favor-rite. Wyitt wished he had asked him to write something on a piece of paper so he could take it with him. Then some time he sat alone at night in some far woods or prairie, he could take out that paper. It would make him see Resolve plain as if standing here, screwing up his mouth and making pothooks and curleycues with his goosefeather pen while around him his smaller brothers watched and admired."Sayward’s second-born son Guerdon is willful, selfish, and, sometimes, disobedient. "Guerdon wished he had him another mammy. Oh, once he liked his mam good enough, but she’d changed. She’d gone back on him. He couldn’t make her out any more.First she stood a slab bench with a gourd of soft soap by the run, and all had to scrub their heads and hands like they were pewter plates. Then she hung up a haw comb, and every time before you came in to eat, you have to hackle your hair with it. Oh, she was bound you’d be somebody around here. She put these puncheons down in the cabin just so she’d had a floor to scour, he believed. Now she talked of getting lime from Maytown and making her boys whitewash the logs."Her ways were so 'cam' you figured she was easy-going, but that’s where she fooled you. The day wasn’t long enough for the things she studied out to do to get you along in the world."Sayward assigns Guerdon and his younger brother Kinzie to mill corn. The sweat mill standing in the chimney corner … " was the devil’s own contraption and turned hard as a four-horse wagon. A day’s grinding seemed a month long, and no Sabbaths."While Sayward is away helping nurse a neighbor, the two boys take the corn they have been assigned to mill to the new grain mill at the river. They spend the entire day listening to stories told by patrons before returning home with a large sack of well-grounded flour. Sayward switches them. In bed that night, Guerdon is resentful."No, he wanted for forget his mam. He didn’t care if he never thought of her again."Later in the novel Guerdon is bit on a finger by a rattlesnake. He cuts off the upper portion of his finger. Neighbors gather inside Sayward’s cabin to offer suggestions and witness the snakebite’s outcome. Sayward tends Guerdon as she sees fit."Guerdon believed he felt a mite better. It had worse things in this world than to lay here with nothing to do but have folks talk and worry over you. He couldn’t get over how good his mam had been to him. She was so 'cam' most times you thought she took you for granted and didn’t give a whoop for you any more. But let something real like this or stone blindness or black plague come along and you found out how much she liked you. Why, she’d chop off her own finger if it would help him any, he could tell. It gave him a feeling for her like old times."I did not enjoy “The Fields” as much as I did “The Trees,” the first novel of Richter’s trilogy; although I am happy that I read it. “The Fields,” I felt, lacked its predecessor’s dramatic edge. Conflicts seemed a bit less daunting, less consequential. I look forward to reading the third novel, the Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Town,” which, I expect, will focus on the consequences of a major human failing committed by Portius in “The Fields,” a failing I chose not to reveal in this review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "The Fields" is an fantastic follow-up to the superb "The Trees". Realistic, moving, without being manipulative, this story of early settlers in the Ohio Valley should grip you until complete: I kept reading "just one more chapter" until way past my bedtime. Excellent.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't find this quite as engrossing as The Trees--it felt more self-aware, for one, as if Richter lost confidence in the subtly of his writing and felt the need for more exposition. But I still thought it was a valuable read and I still think Sayward is such a valuable character in American fiction. I am very much looking forward to the third.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Fields is the second book in the Awakening Land Trilogy. Richter received the Pulitzer Prize for The Town, the third book of the trilogy about American pioneers, and according to the short biography in the back, the first book, The Trees, was the one he "felt was most alive." This is the middle book, and I'd rate it only a smidgin below the first. It's mostly told through the point of view of Sayward Luckett, who was fifteen years old when she came to the Northwest Territory with her family. The books opens in 1803 when she has given birth to her first child and Ohio has just become a state. She described her first glimpse of where she'd come to live for the rest of her life as an ocean of trees. The trees called to "woodsies" like her father and brother, but for her they were the enemy with whom she was at war, and this installment is about her victory:Only last week the stalks were still green and supple. Most every day she had come here to feel the heads and watch the wind run through the field like water. Sometimes the waves minded her of silver fire weaving this way and that... One day last week the wind came from the east. The waves that time rose from the bottom, and then it looked like a waterfall running up hill. Oh, ever since those stalks had stayed so fresh and green through the cold winter she had the feeling that something in that wheat was alive and everlasting.I loved the voice of this short novel. Richter was born in 1890 and knew people who could tell him of the early pioneer days first hand; he talks in his acknowledgements of trying to approximate the speech of the eighteenth and early nineteen century from "old manuscripts, letters, records and other sources, and quite different from the formal written language of the period." The voice he creates is different enough from what we're accustomed to suggest a different time without ever becoming hard to comprehend. And though this was written in 1946, the way he writes women never feels dated. His Sayward came across as very real. I found particularly moving and striking her fierce joy in finally learning to write her own name. All in all I greatly enjoyed this. It's like an adult Little House book, with touches of lyricism, humor, and moving moments.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book as well as the other two in the series should be required reading in every school in the nation. They are fantastic!! It makes me sad to see that so few have read these incredible works. Run, don't walk to your nearest bookseller and buy them now! Get them from your library if you can't afford to buy them! Just read them!