The Battle of Pollocks Crossing

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The Battle of Pollocks Crossing
Battle of Pollocks Crossing DJ 96dpi.jpg
Dust jacket of first edition - 1985
AuthorJ. L. Carr
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
PublisherViking Penguin
Publication date
1985
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages176
ISBN0-670-80559-9
OCLC54742057
Preceded byA Month in the Country (book) 
Followed byWhat Hetty Did 

The Battle of Pollocks Crossing is the sixth novel by J.L. Carr, published in 1985. The novel was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1985 and followed a nomination in 1980 for A Month in the Country, his preceding novel.

The novel describes a year spent by a young English exchange teacher named George Gidner in the fictional town of Palisades on the Great Plains of South Dakota. Like many of Carr's novels it is grounded in personal experience: Carr worked for a year as an exchange teacher in Huron, South Dakota in 1938–1939 and returned again to teach in 1956–1957.[1] Carr also reported that it was his first novel, but the book failed initially to find a publisher.[1] When it had been accepted by Viking Penguin, Carr took it back and spent two days rewriting it. The early titles of the novel were apparently Oh, My America, a quotation from John Donne and To the West, To the West, an immigrant song,[1] although Carr may not have been entirely serious. When the novel was published Carr issued a small 16-page companion volume called Gidner's Brief Lives of the Frontier, a dictionary of people who had lived and died between 1810 and 1890 to the east of the Mississippi river.

Carr bought back the rights to the novel and published it in 1993 in an edition of 2,000 copies as the fourth title from his Quince Tree Press, who still publish it.

Publishing history[]

Translations[]

  • 1987 De slag bij Pollocks Crossing, Veen, Utrecht, Netherlands, ISBN 9789020422344
  • 1991 La bataille de Pollocks Crossing, Actes Sud, France. Translated by Pierre Girard. ISBN 9782868696397

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Carr, J.L. (1991) The Passport Interview. Huntingdon, Cambridge: Passport magazine, issue 2.
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