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| 6. |  | 
		
						
		
											 
				A successful Iowa farmer decides to divide his farm between his three daughters. When the youngest objects, she is cut out of his will. This sets off a chain of events that brings dark truths to light and explodes long-suppressed emotions. An ambitious reimagining of Shakespeare’s King Lear cast upon a typical American community in the late twentieth century, A Thousand Acres takes on themes of truth, justice, love, and pride, and reveals the beautiful yet treacherous topography of humanity....
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| 11. |  | 
		
						
		
											 
				A Pulitzer Prize winner makes her debut for young readers.
 Jane Smiley makes her debut for young readers in this stirring novel set on a California horse ranch in the 1960s. Seventh-grader Abby Lovitt has always been more at ease with horses than with people. Her father insists they call all the mares “Jewel” and all the geldings “George” and warns Abby not to get attached: the horses are there to be sold. But with all the stress at school (the Big Four have turned against Abby and her friends) and home (her brother Danny is gone—for good, it seems—and now Daddy won’t speak his name), Abby seeks refuge with the Georges and the Jewels. But there’s one gelding on her family’s farm that gives her no end of trouble: the horse who won’t meet her gaze, the horse who bucks her right off every chance he gets, the horse her father makes her ride and train, every day. She calls him the Ornery George.
 
 
 From the Hardcover edition....
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| 18. |  | 
		
						
		
											 
				#1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK
 "A WISE, SPIRITED NOVEL . . . [IN WHICH] SMILEY PLUMBS THE WONDROUSLY
 STRANGE WORLD OF HORSE RACING." --People
 
 "ONE OF THE PREMIER NOVELISTS OF HER GENERATION, possessed of a mastery
 of craft and an uncompromising vision that grow more powerful with each
 book . . . Racing's eclectic mix of classes and personalities provides
 Smiley with fertile soil . . . Expertly juggling storylines, she
 investigates the sexual, social, psychological, and spiritual problems
 of wealthy owners, working-class bettors, trainers on the edge of
 financial ruin, and, in a typically bold move, horses."
 --The Washington Post
 
 "A NOVEL OF PASSION IN EVERY SENSE . . . [SHE DOES] IT ALL WITH APLOMB .
 . . WITH A DEMON NARRATIVE INTELLIGENCE."
 --The Boston Sunday Globe
 
 "WITTY, ENERGETIC . . . It's deeply satisfying to read a work of fiction
 so informed about its subject and so alive to every nuance and detail .
 . . [Smiley's] final chapters have a wonderful restorative quality."
 --The New York Times Book Review
 
 
 "RICHLY DETAILED, INGENIOUSLY CONSTRUCTED . . . YOU WILL REVEL IN JANE
 SMILEY'S HORSE HEAVEN."
 --San Diego Union-Tribune
 
 Chosen by the Los Angeles Times as One of the Best Books of the Year...
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| 20. |  | 
		
						
		
											 
				A Pulitzer Prize winner makes her debut for young readers.
 Jane Smiley makes her debut for young readers in this stirring novel set on a California horse ranch in the 1960s. Seventh-grader Abby Lovitt has always been more at ease with horses than with people. Her father insists they call all the mares “Jewel” and all the geldings “George” and warns Abby not to get attached: the horses are there to be sold. But with all the stress at school (the Big Four have turned against Abby and her friends) and home (her brother Danny is gone—for good, it seems—and now Daddy won’t speak his name), Abby seeks refuge with the Georges and the Jewels. But there’s one gelding on her family’s farm that gives her no end of trouble: the horse who won’t meet her gaze, the horse who bucks her right off every chance he gets, the horse her father makes her ride and train, every day. She calls him the Ornery George....
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