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The Wedding Dress (1992)

por Carrie Young

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1153236,935 (3.95)7
These finely wrought stories unfold in the Dakotas during the struggling pioneer days and bone-dry landscape of the thirties as well as the verdant years that followed, where the nighttime plains are bathed by softly radiant harvest moons shining down from dazzling northern skies. Young's absorbing narratives begin with the pleasant sense of Once upon a time... anticipation, but the firmly sketched details, warm humor, and vivid characterizations reveal an unanticipated and satisfying realism. The haunting title story is about a beautiful and tragic pioneer woman and her wedding dress; her gown takes on a life of its own and turns into an enduring symbol for the grace and compassion of homesteading women on the plains. In Bank Night, a hired hand working during the midst of the Depression wins $250 at the movies, careening him into a single night of notoriety that becomes a legend in its time. The Nights of Ragna Rundhaug tells the tale of a woman who wants only to be left alone with her white dog Vittehund and her crocheting but instead is propelled into a life of midwifery because there was no one else to do it. The babies have a predilection for arriving during blizzards and always at night, when she must be transported across the dark plains by frantic husbands who have fortified themselves with strong drink and headstrong horses. All the stories in The Wedding Dress are linked by the enigmatic Nordic characters who people them and by the skill with which Young draws them. Emotions run so deep that they are seldom able to surface; when they do the interaction is extraordinarily luminous, both for the characters themselves and for the fortunate reader. The Wedding Dress isfor all readers, young and old.… (más)
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Delightful collection of early 20th century immigrant life in northwestern North Dakota. Ms. Young is an excellent storyteller and the scenes she describes are easy to follow. It's not all cheery "house on the prairie" tales, nearly every one has a 'dark side' that shows the humanity, flaws and civility ( or lack therof). ( )
  Fashion | Mar 21, 2019 |
This is a collection of short stories set primarily during the early part of the 20th century to shortly after World War II. Young explores the lives of the people of Little Butte, North Dakota, who are mostly Norwegian immigrants (or descended from them).

In the title story, she follows the story of a particularly beautiful and detailed wedding dress, as it is made, then stored in a trunk and finally worn by bride after bride. Young describes the joys and dreams, the sorrows and disappointments of the owner of the dress.

Two of the stories involved a sort of love triangle. In one, two brothers love the same woman. In another, a man remains a bachelor after his fiancé marries another, but cannot avoid the married couple since they live in the next farm over.

All of the stories feature characters that fairly leap off the page, they are so real. I can easily picture the reluctant midwife, or the jubilant hired hand who has just won $250 at the movies. The landscape is cold and bleak, especially during the Dust Bowl years, but the kitchens are warm and inviting. This is the first work by Young that I’ve read; it will not be the last. ( )
  BookConcierge | Jan 18, 2017 |
A lovely, lovely group of stories about frontier people in the North Dakota plains during the early 1900's. Each is a gentle portrait of an ordinary person in extraordinary circumstances - funny, touching, somber, all with exquisite natural dignity. ( )
  MerryMary | Oct 15, 2007 |
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These finely wrought stories unfold in the Dakotas during the struggling pioneer days and bone-dry landscape of the thirties as well as the verdant years that followed, where the nighttime plains are bathed by softly radiant harvest moons shining down from dazzling northern skies. Young's absorbing narratives begin with the pleasant sense of Once upon a time... anticipation, but the firmly sketched details, warm humor, and vivid characterizations reveal an unanticipated and satisfying realism. The haunting title story is about a beautiful and tragic pioneer woman and her wedding dress; her gown takes on a life of its own and turns into an enduring symbol for the grace and compassion of homesteading women on the plains. In Bank Night, a hired hand working during the midst of the Depression wins $250 at the movies, careening him into a single night of notoriety that becomes a legend in its time. The Nights of Ragna Rundhaug tells the tale of a woman who wants only to be left alone with her white dog Vittehund and her crocheting but instead is propelled into a life of midwifery because there was no one else to do it. The babies have a predilection for arriving during blizzards and always at night, when she must be transported across the dark plains by frantic husbands who have fortified themselves with strong drink and headstrong horses. All the stories in The Wedding Dress are linked by the enigmatic Nordic characters who people them and by the skill with which Young draws them. Emotions run so deep that they are seldom able to surface; when they do the interaction is extraordinarily luminous, both for the characters themselves and for the fortunate reader. The Wedding Dress isfor all readers, young and old.

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