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Other titles in the Perennial Classics series:

  1. 3 Plays : Our Town / the Skin of Our Teeth / the Matchmaker (57 - Old Edition)
  2. A Jacques Barzun Reader: Selections from His Works
  3. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (P.S.)
  4. Alas, Babylon
  5. Arthur Rimbaud: Complete Works
  6. Beowulf: An Updated Verse Translation
  7. Black Boy: American Hunger a Record of Childhood and Youth
  8. Brave New World
  9. Brave New World Revisited (58 Edition)
  10. Cheaper by the Dozen
  11. Collected Novellas
  12. Collected Stories
  13. Coming of Age in Samoa
  14. Death Be Not Proud
  15. Demian
  16. Democracy in America
  17. Dynamics of Faith
  18. Essays of E. B. White
  19. Gallipoli
  20. Giants in the Earth: A Saga of the Prairie
  21. Great Short Works of Edgar Allan Poe: Poems, Tales, Criticism
  22. Great Short Works of Herman Melville
  23. Great Short Works of Leo Tolstoy
  24. Growing Up in New Guinea
  25. House Made of Dawn
  26. Innocent Erendira: And Other Stories
  27. Island
  28. Leaf Storm: And Other Stories
  29. Love's Executioner: & Other Tales of Psychotherapy
  30. Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter
  31. Native Son
  32. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View (Perennial Classic)
  33. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View
  34. Old Yeller
  35. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
  36. Poetry, Language, Thought
  37. Profiles in Courage
  38. Red Sky at Morning
  39. Selected Poems 1947-1995
  40. So Big
  41. Sounder
  42. Tao Te Ching: A New English Version, with Forword and Notes
  43. The Art of Loving
  44. The Art of the Novel (Perennial Classic)
  45. The Autobiography of Mark Twain
  46. The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
  47. The Bridge of San Luis Rey
  48. The Crying of Lot 49
  49. The Ginger Tree
  50. The Golden Notebook: Perennial Classics Edition
  51. The Grass is Singing
  52. The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language
  53. The Life of Andrew Jackson
  54. The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love
  55. The Odyssey of Homer
  56. The Perennial Philosophy
  57. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: Perennial Classics Edition
  58. The Prophets
  59. The Skin of Our Teeth
  60. The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements
  61. The Unbearable Lightness of Being
  62. The Wapshot Chronicle
  63. The Wapshot Scandal
  64. Under the Volcano (00 Edition)
  65. V.
  66. Waiting for God
  67. Walt Whitman: A Life
  68. Watership Down
  69. When Nietzsche Wept: A Novel of Obsession
  70. Years with Ross
  71. You Can't Go Home Again
  72. Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values

Giant (Perennial Classics)

by Edna Ferber

Giant (Perennial Classics) Cover

ISBN13: 9780060956707
ISBN10: 0060956704
Condition: Standard
All Product Details

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

This March day the vast and brassy sky, always spangled with the silver glint of airplanes, roared and glittered with celestial traffic' Gigantic though they loomed against the white-hot heavens, there was nothing martial about these winged mammoths. They were merely private vehicles bearing nice little alligator jewel cases and fabulous gowns and overbred furs. No sordid freight sullied these four-engined family jobs whose occupants were Dallas or Houston or Vientecito or Waco women in Paris gowns from Neiman-Marcus; and men from Amarillo or Corpus Christi or San Angelo or Benedict in boots and Stetsons and shirt sleeves.

All Texas was flying to Jett Rink's party. All Texas, that is, possessed of more than ten million in cash or cattle or cotton or wheat or oil. Thus was created an aerial stampede. Monsters in a Jovian quadrille, the planes converged from the Timber Belt and the Rio Grande Valley, from the Llano Estacado and the Trans-Pecos; the Blacklands the Balcones Escarpment the Granite Mountains the Central Plains the Edwards Plateau the boundless Panhandle. High, high they soared above the skyscraper office buildings that rose idiotically out of the endless plain; above the sluggish rivers and the arroyos, above the lush new hotels and the anachronistic white-pillarcd mansions; the race horses in rich pasture, the swimming pools the drives of transplanted palms the huge motion picture palaces the cattle herds and the sheep and mountains and wild antelope and cotton fields and Martian chemical plants whose aluminum stacks gave back the airplanes glitter for glitter. And above the grey dust-bitten shanties of the Mexican barrios and the roadside barbecue shacks and thewindmills and the water holes and the miles of mesquite and cactus.

There were, of course, a few party-goers so conservative or so sure of their position in society, or even so impecunious, as to make the journey by automobile, choosing to cover the distance at a leisurely ninety miles an hour along the flat concrete ribbon that spanned the thousand miles of Texas from north horizon to the Gulf.

Though the pitiless Southwest sun glared down on the airborne and the groundling it met defeat in the vine-veiled veranda of Reata Ranch Main House. Even the ever present Gulf wind, arriving dry and dust-laden after its journey from the coast, here took on a pretense of cool moisture as it filtered through the green and spacious shade. Cushions of palest pastel sailcloth on couches and chairs refreshed the eye even before the heat-tortured body found comfort, and through the day there was always the tinkle of ice against glass to soothe the senses. Through the verdant screen one caught glimpses of a heavenblue swimming pool and actually, too, a take in this and land. Radios yelped and brayed from automobiles and ranch houses, towns and cities throughout the length and breadth of this huge and lonely commonwealth from the Gulf of Mexico to the Oklahoma border, from the Rio Grande to Louisiana, but here at Reata Ranch no such raucous sounds intensified the heat waves. Jett Rink's name splintered the air everywhere else, but not here. It stalked in black three-inch headlines across the front page of every newspaper from El Paso to Bowie. It stared out from billboards and newsreels. It was emblazoned on the very heavens in skywriting. Omnipresent, like Jett Rink's oil derricks straddling theland. At every turn the ears and eyes were assaulted by the stale and contrived news of Jett Rink's munificence.

The JETT RINK AIR-PORT . . . gift Of JETT RINK to the city of Hermoso ... biggest airport in the Southwest ... private pre-opening celebration ... two thousand invited guests ... magnificent banquet in the Grand Concourse ... most important citizens ... champagne ... motion picture stars ... Name Bands ... millions ... first Texas billionaire ... Orchids ... caviar flown from New York ... zillions ... lobster flown from Maine . . . millions . . . oil . . . strictly private ... millions ... biggestmillionsbiggestbillionsbiggesttriltionsbiggest zillions.

Mrs. Jordan Benedict, dressed for the air journey--blue shantung and no hat-sat in her bedroom at Reata Ranch, quiet, quiet. She sat very relaxed in the cool chintz slipper chair, her long slim hands loosely clasped in her lap. The quiet and the cool laved her. She sat storing coolness and quiet against the time when her senses would be hammered and racked by noise and heat; big men and bourbon, the high shrill voices of Texas women, blare of brass, crash of china, odors of profuse foods, roar of plane motors.

Now, as she sat, little sounds came faintly to her ears, little accustomed soothing sounds. A light laugh from the far-off kitchen wingone of the Mexican girls, Delfina probably, the gay careless one, the others were more serious about their work. The clip-snip of Dimodeo's garden shears--Dimodeo and his swarming crew who seemed to spend their days on their knees clip-snipping, coaxing fine grass to grow green, and hedges to flower and water to spurt in this desert country. The muffled thud of a horse's hoofs onsun-baked clay; one of the vaqueros who still despised the jeep or Ford as a means of locomotion. The clang of a bell, deep-throated, resonant, an ancient bell that announced the nooning at Reata Ranch schoolhouse. The soft plaint of the mourning doves. The town of Benedict, bustling and thriving, lay four miles distant but here at Reata Main House set back a mile from the highway there was no sound of traffic or commerce. So Leslie Benedict sat very still within this bubble of quiet suspended for the moment before it must burst at the onslaught of high-pitched voices and high-powered motors. For all the family was going, and all the guests up at the huge Guest House there at the other end of the drive. The big plane was in readiness at Reata Ranch airfield and the Cadillacs were waiting to take them all to the plane.

Review:

"Miss Ferber at her best, and that's very good indeed."(--St. Louis Globe-Democrat)

Synopsis:

Edna Ferber's classic story of a Texas family's rise to the pinnacle of society in the early days of oil wildcatting was the basis of a popular film starring Rock Hudson, James Dean, and Elizabeth Taylor.

Synopsis:

This sweeping tale captures the essence of Texas on a staggering scale as it chronicles the life and times of cattleman Jordan "Bick" Benedict, his naive young society wife, Leslie, and three generations of land-rich sons.A sensational story of power, love, cattle barons, and oil tycoons, Giant was the basis of the classic film starring James Dean, Elizabeth Taylor, and Rock Hudson.

About the Author

The original author of such screen classics as Show Boat, Cimarron and Giant and coauthor with George S. Kaufman of Dinner at Eight and Stage Door, Edna Ferber (1885-1968) was among the most popular and acclaimed American novelists between World War I and World War II, as well as a noted playwright, short-story writer, and charter member of the Algonquin Round Table. She is also the author of Saratoga Trunk

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:
rocmanw, March 23, 2008 (view all comments by rocmanw)
A book to fall into and enjoy the ride from the lazy elegance of 1930's Virginia to the raucous billionaire ranch and oil crowd of Texas in the 1950's. The main character is Leslie Benedict, an intelligent and inquisitive bride who marries millionaire Texas cattle rancher Bick Bendict and becomes a somewhat reluctant part of his rarefied existence as a member of old Texas royalty.

The story is beautifully told and the characters are vivid and three dimensional. I am now in my 60's, and have read and enjoyed Ferber's literary style in Giant since it first came out in the 1950's.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9780060956707
Author:
Ferber, Edna
Publisher:
Harper Perennial
Author:
by Edna Ferber and Stuart M. Rosen
Author:
Rosen, Stuart M.
Author:
Rosen, Trustee, Stuart M.
Location:
New York:
Subject:
Historical
Subject:
Fiction
Subject:
Family
Subject:
Historical - General
Subject:
Westerns
Subject:
Ranch life
Subject:
Westerns - General
Subject:
General Fiction
Subject:
Domestic fiction
Subject:
Western stories
Edition Description:
Paperback
Series:
Perennial Classics
Series Volume:
no. 976
Publication Date:
September 2000
Binding:
Paperback
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Pages:
416
Dimensions:
8.03x5.35x1.05 in. .80 lbs.

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