Bucking the Sun is a novel by American author Ivan Doig, published in 1996. It is the fourth book in Doig's Two Medicine Country series.[1] The title refers to "working against the glare of sunrise or sunset".[2]

Plot

The Duff family are homesteaders who move from their alfalfa farm to work on the Fort Peck Dam, a New Deal project.[3]

Reception

Timothy Foote of the New York Times described the novel as "a neat, excruciating Agatha Christie country-house murder set down in sprawling Montana."[4] Kirkus Reviews gave the book a mixed review: "The Duffs are believable but not memorable; Steinbeck this writer is not. Doig's real achievement is to chronicle—with empathy and precise, lyrical authority, down to the last load of gravel hauled in a sturdy Ford truck—the magnificent Fort Peck project and the desperate times out of which it arose."[5]

References

  1. "Two Medicine Country Series by Ivan Doig".
  2. Freeman, Judith (12 May 1996). "A Big Story Under the Big Sky : FICTION : BUCKING THE SUN,By Ivan Doig". Los Angeles Times.
  3. Bucking the Sun. 13 May 1997. ISBN 9780684831497.
  4. Foote, Timothy (16 June 1996). "The Dammed". The New York Times.
  5. "Bucking the Sun". Kirkus Reviews.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.