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Winesburg, Ohio

3.8(7)
Language
English
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About the book

A foundational work of American Modernist literature, Winesburg, Ohio is an interconnected collection of short stories following life and repression in a small town alongside a young man's coming of age, now freshly repackaged for the Union Square & Co. Signature Classics Line.

Set in and named after the fictionalized town of Winesburg, Ohio, Sherwood Anderson's 1919 collection of interconnected short stories served as a foundational work of American Modernist literature. Based loosely on the author's childhood in Ohio, the work is structured around the life and coming-of-age of its protagonist, George Willard, following him from childhood to independence, when he eventually chooses to abandon the town as a young man. The collection depicts the fraught reality of a small Midwestern town, and at its time, it was highly controversial for its daring portrayal of sexual freedom and rejection of conventional restraints. Anderson's work had a profound impact on American literature, influencing renowned writers such as Hemingway and Faulkner. The poet Hart Crane praised how "Winesburg, Ohio, when it first appeared, kept me up a whole night in a steady crescendo of emotion."

Editions (48)

ISBN9781454971139
PublisherUnion Square & Co.
Publication Date02/02/27
Pages208

Reviews & Ratings

7 ratings

1 reviews

3.8

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  • jdgut
    jdgut

    3 Followers

    4.0

    An American classic for all that love short stories. Loosly led through Winesburg, Ohio by the young George Willard, the towns news reporter, we get to know a cast of many different characters that live in this midwestern place. The feeling of longing and that life is bound to begin elsewhere are woven through all twenty two tales. Andersons characters struggle to communicate with each other always seems believable and never tip into charicatures of miscommunications. The tone of the narrative voice stays in a reporting tone for most all of the book, but once it leaves this modus, Anderson surprises with pleasantly poetic passages. I can only recommend this book to anyone that wants to dive into a master work of the twentieth century that influenced other greatAmerican writers like Hemingway and Faulkner.

    Aug 25, 2025

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