Penhally

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Cooper Square Publishers, 1971 - Fiction - 282 pages
This narrative of a landed Kentucky family, traced over four generations, shows the decline of its patriarchal order, overwhelmed in the twentieth century by an irresponsible individualism. Penhally is the family home of the Llewellyn family in Kentucky (near the Tennessee border), where Gordon is from. The book follows the fortunes of family from 1826 up to the time when Gordon wrote the book (i.e. a hundred years later). Though a story of a family it is also, in many respects, the story of the South. The story starts with Nicholas Llewellyn deciding not to divide his inheritance of the Penhally property with his half-brother, Ralph, leading to a family split (the two brothers never speak to one another again). His reason is that he wishes to maintain the grandeur of this branch of the family (the rest of the family is in Virginia). Neither Nicholas nor his successors feel fully in control of Penhally, as it is entailed down the generations. Nor are they in control of their lives, as they are dominated firstly by the house, then love and then outside events (initially the Civil War, then events in the South after the Civil War, such as emancipation) and finally personal failure (fratricide and wanton spending). The fratricide is only the final nail in the coffin, after the house has passed out of the family.

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
13
Section 3
53
Copyright

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About the author (1971)

Caroline Gordon's controlled use of her craft,as well as her conservative attitudes, stamped her as a traditionalist among modern writers. Born in Kentucky as the daughter of a classics teacher and graduated from Bethany College in 1916, she married the poet Allen Tate in 1924 and became an associate of the Fugitives and Southern Agrarian groups that helped to make Nashville a vital mecca for southern intellectuals during the 1970s. Her first novel, Penhally (1931), traces the decline brought about by pride and jealousy as well as the devastation of the Civil War. None Shall Look Back (1937), which had the misfortune to appear shortly after Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind, is a distinguished but neglected novel with a theme similar to her first. Against the story of the Allard family, which, like the house of Penhally, deteriorates through internal weaknesses, as well as because of the Civil War, Gordon sets off the heroic figure of the Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. The Garden of Adonis (1937) picks up the story of the Allards, this time during the depression of the 1930s, and shows how social conditions, as well as the family's own incapacities, have put the men of the family at the mercy of their spoiled and neurotic women. Aleck Maury, Sportsman (1934), like Gordon's most famous short story "Old Red," is remarkable for its vivid hunting scenes. Probably no other woman has written so knowledgeably and sympathetically about the outdoor man's love of the fields and streams of his native region and the almost sacramental view of nature that accompanies such allegiance.

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