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Ron Powers : Tom and Huck Don't Live Here Anymore
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Author: Ron Powers
Title: Tom and Huck Don't Live Here Anymore
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Date: 2001-11-06
ISBN: 031226240X
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Weight: 1.45 pounds
Size: 1.2 x 6.02 x 10.14 inches
Edition: 1st
Amazon prices:
$1.94used
$4.93new
$7.95Amazon
Previous givers: 2 Chelsea (USA: RI), Donetta (USA: MO)
Previous moochers: 2 J3ssic4 (USA: MA), Jenny S. (USA: IL)
Description: Product Description
Ron Powers' hometown is Hannibal, Missouri, home of Mark Twain, and therefore birthplace of our image of boyhood itself. Powers returns to Hannibal to chronicle the horrific story of two killings, both committed by minors, and the trials that followed. Seamlessly weaving the narrative of the events in Hannibal with the national withering of the very concept of childhood, Powers exposes a fragmented adult society where children are left adrift, transforming isolation into violence.

From a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Tom and Huck Don't Live Here Anymore is a powerful, disturbing, and eye-opening dispatch from the homefront that will take its place alongside the works of Antony Lucas, Robert Coles, and Tracy Kidder.


Amazon.com Review
This book is at once an engrossing story of murder in a small American town and a profound meditation on the meaning of childhood in modern America. Ron Powers, co-author of Flags of Our Fathers, returns to Hannibal, Missouri--the boyhood home of Mark Twain, and also where Powers grew up--after learning about two local teenage killers. The very notion of it shook him: "In addition to their human victims, small-town killings assault ... the myth of the hearth, the safe inner circle that protects a loving enclave against the cruelties of a barbarous world." He goes on to describe "a world of absent or dimly connected adults" and how adolescents fall into the grip of a deep meaninglessness and whose "daily movements might easily begin with a search for a better brand of cigarette and end with a shotgun murder." Most of Tom and Huck Don't Live Here Anymore is a tale of two true crimes, though it's also punctuated by autobiography and full of Twain references. Hard to put down because the writing is so good, the book is hard to forget because its message is so troubling. --John Miller

URL: http://bookmooch.com/031226240X
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