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The Tidewater Tales (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf)
 
 
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The Tidewater Tales (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf) [Paperback]

John Barth
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 655 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press; New Ed edition (15 Feb 1997)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 080185556X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801855566
  • Product Dimensions: 23.5 x 15.6 x 3.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,588,162 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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John Barth
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Product Description

Review

"Charting ever more daring fictional waters, John Barth here sets sail on a huge voyage of a book—part myth, part fantasy, part history, part sheer exuberant wordplay.

(Washington Post Book World )

What is so moving about The Tidewater Tales is its frequent and frequently incidental richness as a love story—marital, filial, domestic—and also in its love of a place, of a country, even as place and country are scarred by depredation.The newest edition of the most complete introduction to the vital security issues facing the United States returns to the book's classic organizational format.

(William Pritchard New York Times Book Review )

The Tidewater Tales takes the form of a narrative encyclopedia, a pre-natal crash course in the politics, social life, literature, history, and mythology of late-twentieth century America... It sits... on the map of modern American fiction as a gigantic memorable construction.

(Jonathan Raban Times Literary Supplement )

Book Description

Now in paperback—John Barth's widely acclaimed, encyclopedic novel of the Chesapeake.


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Teeming, sprawling, overflowing with life, narrative and fun, 12 April 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Tidewater Tales (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf) (Paperback)
John Barth's novel is the kind of book that draws you into itself, pulling you into a narrative journey that allows you to grow and change along with the characters in the novel. Drawing on his vast knowledge of frametale literature and his four favourite intertexts ("The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", "The Tale of the Thousand Nights and a Night", "The Odyssey", and "Don Quixote"), Barth creates and constructs a multi-layered tale of writing, reading, storytelling, and the love and delight of life and narrative. Peter Sagamore, once a writer of expansive novels, now a writer cramped by microminimalism, asks his eight and a half month pregnant wife, Katherine Shorter Sherrit Sagamore, to set him a task, so she asks him to take her sailing. They set out in their engineless yacht, named "Story", for a day's sailing on the Chesapeake Bay, and are swept away from home by the first of twin storms, Blam! and Blooey!, that hold the narrative and the novel, and the characters, between them. During two weeks of sailing "wither the wind listeth" around the Bay, this sexy, dreamy, lovely couple, very much in love, tell the stories of their lives, trying to find a way to solve Peter's writerly woes. Readers of John Barth will recognise the time and place of this novel, and some of the slightly renamed characters, from his earlier novel "Sabbatical: A Romance". This concurrence allows for a fecund play of revision and rewriting which are themselves themes of the novel: all the writers and readers and storytellers in the novel, including Odysseus, Don Quixote and Scheherezade, are in some sort of narrative pickle, and need their fellows to experiment with them to try and overcome their dilemma. Written from a dual and conjoined narrative perspective of both Peter and Katherine Sagamore, the narrators play with time and tense, anticipating things they will consciously write into the story, and other such narrative tricks. This playfulness is apparent and delightul throughout the novel, and does much to make the reader smile much of the time, but never drowns the real drama of the personal journey the characters are going through, Peter's threadbare writing and Kath's enormous pregnancy, their doubts about bringing children (probably twins) into the world, and their marriage. More than anything, this is a novel about the world of love, and how to live in it, and that is the story that Peter and Katherine tell together.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Clearly a banquet that lingers in the memory, 6 April 2008
This review is from: The Tidewater Tales (Paperback)
Peter is a working class successful writer who has become blocked and so begs his well heeled wife (Katherine) who is 8 ½ months pregnant to set him a task. She does which is to tell stories as they sail around the Chesapeake Bay (a 200 mile long estuary on the Virginia and Maryland coastlines) in their boat called Story. During of which we discover how they fell in love in the 60's but not met up until the 70's and why they are having babies now as they hit 40. But this is only one of three other love stories in the novel. One is the love of landscape and the other is of sailing. Both of which are powerfully evoked throughout the novel. Their love story, landscape and sailing are then effectively linked to their families. Hers being local old money who have shaped the land since before the USA was founded and his being boat builders who have shaped access to the water since coming over in the 19th century.

Katherine's family are open, generous friendly and sophisticated so accept and support the whims of Peter and Katherine to sail around the Bay. Likewise Peter shy and intense and Katherine open and bright are deep friends and in love so we like the characters and join in the physicality evoked by the writing. However these are but three of several strands in the novel, two others are a political thriller and an eco-mystery. The first explores the CIA-KGB spy games as the SALT talks dirty tricks play out in the local area. The second looks at the environmental damage being done by illegal dumping. Both story lines are linked firmly with Katharine's ex husband and her charming but wastrel brother but not as you expect.

But all this are themes for the real focus of the novel which is about the art and mystery of writing and story telling. So over the 14 days of sailing we move in and out of the stories of Don Quixote, Huckleberry Finn, 1001 nights of Arabian Tales, Odyssey as they shape and are shaped by the love story landscape and sailing. We meet the narrators as characters finishing their own stories and shaping the novel as we do as reader-characters. This means that the narrative moves through a whole range of formats (plays, short essays, monologues, puns, wordplay etc) and genres (love story, social comedy, thriller, family saga, etc) with us and the unborn babies as narrator commentators along with the characters who know they are in a story. And we know their fates outside the story itself.

Don't expect a quick read as its 655 pages and small print but do expect an intellectual tour de force and a page turner for what is mediation on writing that races along driven by the reader's identification with Peter's writers block, and their immediate parenthood while the multi-layer story entertains and stretches. Clearly a banquet that lingers in the memory when many beans on toast novels have been long forgotten so highly recommended.
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Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)

18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Like the tide, Barth's stories cleanse and refresh our life, 11 July 1996
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tidewater Tales (Paperback)

I suppose it is inevitable that, as the post-war boomers approach the big six-zero over the next decade, we will see a tidal flood of tender, soul-searching narratives. Boomers want to understand rather than simply experience life, and most have been frustrated by life's refusal to obey our expectations.


John Barth seems to have made such soul searching his life work, and I seem to have followed him book for book, life experience by life experience over the years.
A clever "academic" writer (read: "he writes like a dream but his wit sometimes overwhelms the story"), Barth has addressed boomer experience and frailty .

Seeming to be five to ten years ahead of boomers, his books have ranged from the tragedy resulting from a terribly botched abortion (long before we openly spoke of this horror), through the visionary and usually misguided quest of the idealist (Sot-Weed Factor and Giles Goatboy), the terrible pain of realizing one is an adult (the clever but exhausting Letters), to more leisurely and accessible mid-life reassessment as protagonists take "voyages" on the emotional seascape of middle age (Sabbatical, Tidewater Tales, Last Voyage of Somebody the Sailor, Once upon a Time...).


Each five years or so, I eagerly await his newest offering, devour it, and then feel frustrated when his literary games seem to detract from his story.

But, then, each time I realize (as if for the first time), the essential nature of his writing. Like the age-old games from which his writings spring (the quest/redemption stories of the Iliad and Oddessy, the "doomed" prophet stories of the Old and New Testaments, the mistaken identity games of Shakespeare and thousands of authors since, and the metaphor of story as voyage and voyage as growth from Chaucer, 1001 Nights, etc), Barth plays his games to remind us that the act of story telling *is* the experience, it *is* the reason we read: the experience of hearing ghost stories around the camp fire remains with us long long after we have forgotten the actual story.

And then I remember that, as a reader, I have no more "right" to expect neatness and closure in a Barth story than I have the right to expect neatness and closure in my own life. Try as we might, our own work, our own story is always in progress. And like Barth's beloved Tidewater, the ebb and flow of our own story defies our attempt to capture to master it.

In the end, life and Barth's stories remain as delightfully cleansing as the tide itself.

KRH www.umeais.maine.edu/~hayward


11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What he's done is what he'll do, 1 Nov 2002
By Michael Battaglia - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tidewater Tales (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf) (Paperback)
Of the maybe five novels of Barth I've read so far in my young life, this is probably my favorite of them all (Sot-Weed Factor does run a close second, however) if only due to the laziness factor since I didn't feel I needed a doctorate in English literature or mythology to understand everything that was going on. All told, on the surface this is probably one of the lighter books he's done . . . it's basically about a couple (teh wife's eight months pregnant) going out sailing in Cheaspeake Bay and to pass time they start telling stories. Except it's about everything else too and slowly the novel starts to incorporate local history, the knots of the characters' lives, mythology, plays, short stories . . . you name it. For someone not of Barth's skill this would come off as a tedious academic exercise merely to show the author's genre bending abilities. Once in a while it teeters toward that but manages to stay on the right side of the line. What helps is the sheer exuburance of the book, the people all seem to like each other (not that there isn't conflict), folks are happy with their lives, never before has Barth managed to create a more three dimensional set of people or given them a more realistic world to inhabit. It's just genuinely enjoyable to read, especially as the stories and stories-within-stories start to bounce off each othere. There are echoes of several of Barth's earlier works here, I spotted definitely Lost in the Funhouse and Chimera (and the Sot-Weed Factor is mentioned) so for long time readers it's a bit of a revisit with old friends. Is the book probably longer than it needs to be? Yeah, but if long books are your problem than you shouldn't be reading Barth. The main couple Peter and Katherine are sometimes a bit too precious for words (the constant renaming of the babies got annoying real fast) and in spurts there is just too much love going around but I can't really level that as a flaw now, can I? Politics does threaten to creep in every so often but it's dated eighties style politics now so I didn't pay much attention to it. Overall, it doesn't break any vibrant new ground for Barth but serves as a fine summing up of his strengths and his skills, the man can tell a decent story and he can write the pants off just about anybody (and no, those aren't the same thing) so if you want a fun "literary" novel that won't overwhelm you with all those nasty post-modern tricks those oh so erudite authors love to pull on unsuspecting readers, this might just be what you're looking for. Just stay away if you're allergic to mythology, if you want to read Barth it's not something you can easily escape from. But I like it anyway.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Set me a task!, 27 Mar 2007
By surfer461 "Pura Vida!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tidewater Tales (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf) (Paperback)
Set me a task indeed! It has become the catch phrase my wife and I use to pull ourselves out of a funk... and reading this book will pull just about anyone out of theirs. Following Peter and Kate's sailing adventure over the course of the last 14 days of their pregnancy (with twins) is a celebration of life. Don't be daunted by it's length! It's like reading multiple books in one: a travel book, a play, throw a little espionage and environmentalism into the pot and meet some of literature's greatest characters along the way. Get through the first 50 pages, then sit back and enjoy the ride. By the end you'll find that you just don't want it to end.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 8 reviews  4.4 out of 5 stars 
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