logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Donald Harington
Donald Harington was one of America's greatest writers of fiction. His fifteen novels have been called jubilant, lyrical, foxy, captivating, delicate, bawdy, playful, reckless, joyful, courageous. Set in the fictional hamlet of Stay More, Arkansas, Harington's stories blend myth, dreamscape and... show more

Donald Harington was one of America's greatest writers of fiction. His fifteen novels have been called jubilant, lyrical, foxy, captivating, delicate, bawdy, playful, reckless, joyful, courageous. Set in the fictional hamlet of Stay More, Arkansas, Harington's stories blend myth, dreamscape and sharply observed speech and manners to depict a rich, eccentric, rural society. All fifteen novels--from the classic Architecture of the Arkansas Ozarks, to the redemptive Choiring of the Trees, the love story With and the concluding novel Enduring, published just two months before Mr. Harington's death-- are now available as The Complete Novels of Donald Harington, a must-have collection for all those who wish to read the very best, authentic, contemporary American writing."The quirkiest, most original body of work in contemporary US letters." -Boston Globe"Harington is hooked into the deepest traditions of storytelling, dipping his buckets directly into the well it all comes from, pursuing a literature dedicated not to documentation or self-expression, but to fascination, to lifting us out of ourselves and the dailiness of our lives -- to making our world again wondrous and large." --Los Angeles Times"Totally satisfying... Harington reveres the most ordinary aspects of the lives of unexceptional people...he makes his joy infectious." --Time MagazineDonald Harington (1935 -2009) was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, and spent nearly all of his childhood summers in the Ozark mountain hamlet of Drakes Creek, his mother's hometown, where his grandparents operated the general store and post office. There, before he lost his hearing to meningitis at the age of twelve, he listened carefully to the vanishing Ozark dialect and the old tales told by local storytellers. He published his first novel in 1965, and fourteen more for a total of fifteen, most of them set in the Ozark hamlet of his own creation, Stay More, loosely based on Drakes Creek. Acclaimed by critics as "an undiscovered continent," "America's Chaucer," and "one of the most powerful, subtle and inventive novelists in America," Harington was the recipient of the Robert Penn Warren Award, the Porter Prize, the Heasley Prize, and the Oxford American Lifetime Achievement Award.
show less
Birth date: December 22, 1935
Died: November 07, 2009
Donald Harington's Books
Recently added on shelves
Donald Harington's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
Amadan na Briona
Amadan na Briona rated it 12 years ago
The lightning bug, or firefly, is neither a bug nor a fly, but a beetle. I like bug, because it has a cozy sound, a hugging sound, a snug sound, it fits her, my Bug.Deep in the dark blue air sing these lives that make the summer night. The lightning bug does not sing. But of all these lives, it alon...
JeffreyKeeten
JeffreyKeeten rated it 13 years ago
"The smells of things in the air of the night are the calls of lives wanting to be found. Why else are fragrances fragrant?We see to find, we hear to find, we smell to find and be found. Until we find or be found, we are lost and wanting."The theme of the mood of an ending is of a loss or finding.I ...
melaniebowser
melaniebowser rated it 13 years ago
Haven't even finished the book yet, just love it already.
Readundant
Readundant rated it 14 years ago
Sometimes I think I have a mild form of prosopagnosia. When people say kids look like their parents, I always have to smile and nod, unless we're talking Martin Sheen/Emilio Estevez levels of facial similarity. And then there's this thing I do where I think someone I know looks like a famous person,...
The Drift Of Things
The Drift Of Things rated it 14 years ago
May I be permitted to strangle this author? Pleeeeeez can I? I once thought there could be nothing more annoying than a novel written in the present tense by an author not qualified to pull it off. Oh, how mistaken I was. Here's something about twice as annoying: A NOVEL WRITTEN IN THE SECOND PERSON...
see community reviews
Need help?