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Liberty: A Lake Wobegon Novel (Lake Wobegon Novels)

Liberty: A Lake Wobegon Novel (Lake Wobegon Novels)
Author: Garrison Keillor
Publisher: Viking Adult
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy New: $9.88
You Save: $16.07 (62%)



New (44) Used (20) from $7.19

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 17051

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0670019917
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780670019915
ASIN: 0670019917

Publication Date: September 16, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: new hardcover in dustjacket,NO remainder marks ships same or next business day with free delivery confirmation

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - Liberty (Lake Wobegon Novels)
  • Paperback - Liberty: A Novel of Lake Wobegon
  • Audio Download - Liberty (Unabridged)
  • Kindle Edition - Liberty
  • Hardcover - Liberty: A Lake Wobegon Novel (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
BA national holiday in Lake Wobegon is always gaudy and joyful. But what is going on between Clint Bunsen and Miss Liberty?/BBRBRClint Bunsen is one of the old reliables in Lake Wobegon the treasurer of the Lutheran church and the auto mechanic who starts your car on below-zero mornings. For six years he has run the Fourth of July parade, turning what was once a line of pickup trucks and girls pushing baby carriages that hold their cats into an event of dazzling spectacle. Blazing bands, marching units, cannons, horses, a fireworks show, and the famous Living Flagone thousand men and women wearing red, white, or blue, standing in formationhave attracted the attention of CNN and prompted the governor to put in an appearance as well. The town is dizzy with anticipation. Until, that is, they hear of Clints ambition to run for Congress. Theyre embarrassed for him. They know him too wellhis unfortunate episodes involving vodka sours, his rocky marriage. And then there is his friendship, or whatever it is, with the twenty-four-year-old girl who dresses up as the Statue of Liberty for the parade. Its rumored that underneath those robes she is buck naked, and that her torch contains a quart of booze.BRBR Its Lake Wobegon as its always beengood loving people who drive each other crazy.


Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Funny, But Darker Story from Keillor   January 8, 2009
Finished Garrison Keillor's Liberty. If you like Lake Wobegon Days and its many sequels, or if you're a fan of Keillor's radio show A Prairie Home Companion, you'll probably like Liberty. It's a story that centers around Lake Wobegon's humorous attempts to put together a major Fourth of July celebration. The story revolves around the chair, Clint Bunsen, who's also going through some aging issues.br /br /It's funny and very readable, which is par for the course for Keillor. Liberty is a little different from other offerings, in my opinion, due to the way he handles the issues of aging, regret, and what our lives mean. It almost has an elegiac feeling at times.br /br /One drawback to the book: Keillor tends to repeat himself; perhaps it's due to his skills as an oral storyteller. br /br /Liberty is a good read if you like Keillor, or just like humorous stories about small-town America.br /br /


5 out of 5 stars Vintage Keillor   December 30, 2008
Reviewers here are so critical! br /br /Yes, this is a little darker than Pontoon, but with a real gift of character development and K's signature manner of juxtaposing being good with being happy. The denoument is beautiful and heart-warming.br /br /Garrison Keillor is a national treasure.


4 out of 5 stars Liberty   November 23, 2008
Typical Garrison Keillor offering. Excellent character development, irony, humor, folksy wisdom, everything you've come to expect from the Lake Wobegone collection. Great read. Enjoy.


5 out of 5 stars Read LIBERTY and you'll never think of the Fourth of July in quite the same way again   November 18, 2008
Is Clint Bunsen suffering a midlife crisis? He is convinced by a faulty DNA lab report that he is part slightly over half Hispanic, which differs strongly from what his family has always believed: that they are absolutely, positively 100% Norwegian. He attempts to shed his sturdy, Midwestern persona by thinking in Spanish and ordering some rather flamboyant clothing to wear on July 4th.br /br /Clint's wife of many years is getting on his nerves, and he has met a hottie: a twenty-something woman named Angelica, who really rings his chimes. She teaches yoga, is a topless dancer and a part-time mystic, and Clint feels that he has just won the lottery when he's alone with her. He's even toying with the idea of accompanying her to California. His children are grown and gone, so he doesn't feel it's necessary to stick around. He's tired of working his fingers to the bone as a mechanic in the family business, the local Ford garage, which isn't doing all that well anyway. And he's being shoved aside by the Parade Committee, which is unfortunate, considering all his hard work in attempting to give the sleepy little community a spectacular celebration year after year. This will be his last year as Chairman of the Fourth of July parade, and he intends to pull out all the stops.br /br /Clint has spared no expense when it comes to celebrating the Fourth. Didn't he put the town on the map last year with the parade? He even got CNN to cover a few minutes of it on national television, even though Lake Wobegon itself never got mentioned on air. And this year's parade and celebration will be phenomenal, or at least his version of phenomenal.br /br /He even managed to secure Homeland Security Funds that he used to purchase aerial diversion devices (some pretty awesome fireworks, though they couldn't really be called fireworks). He stepped on some folks' toes when he said there would be no pickup trucks in the parade and no tractors except for antique ones. He cancelled Cowpie Bingo and didn't want the Sons of Knute to march because they were too pokey. Local folks in costume would represent George and Martha Washington, Abe Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt. Uncle Sam would be on stilts. A handbell choir, a precision pitchfork drill team and a couple representing American Gothic painted by Grant Wood would also march. There would be four teams of 16 Percherons pulling circus wagons. The Living Flag, the mayor, the governor and Miss Liberty would all participate.br /br /When the Fourth arrives, the community is filled with excitement --- if residents of Lake Wobegon can actually get excited about anything. There's some tension in the air, too, because Angelica has arrived in town with her new boyfriend, Clint's wife is toting a gun, the governor isn't on time, and all manner of other problems keep popping up. Even CNN is running late.br /br /The parade begins. Circus wagons, drum-and-bugle corps, a 4-H float, the Soybean Queen, 20 dancers from the Tammy Jo Dance Studio Happiness Troupe, Leaping Lutherans Parachute Team, 10 Minutemen, a unicycle basketball team, a 40-member handbell choir, and all the rest. Miss Liberty, Angelica, is wearing only a robe and sandals. Imagine a parade gone somewhat askew, to say the very least. Read LIBERTY and you'll never think of the Fourth of July in quite the same way again.br /br / --- Reviewed by Carole Turner


4 out of 5 stars Keillor Embraces the Dark Side   November 15, 2008
Garrison Keillor must hate his Lake Wobegon almost as much as he loves it. Though Keillor is not known for Village Virus writing like his Midwestern predecessors Sinclair Lewis and Sherwood Anderson, in _Liberty_ Keillor has embraced the dark side of his charming and quirky small town, for here his characters are not simply odd: they are deranged, depressed, and even bitter at times. Rather than being repulsed by this darkness, however, readers should be ready to embrace it. In the novel, the plight of Clint Bunsen is surprisingly compelling and fresh despite its mid-life-crisis conventions. A man thoroughly tired of the unforgiving dullness of his work, whose wife expresses more passion for her tomatoes than for him, who finds he may be of Spanish, not Norwegian, descent, Clint longs for, of course, Liberty. And when freedom presents itself in the form of a young and beautiful yoga instructor/topless dancer/fortune teller who wants to whisk him off to the California he has always longed for, you root for Clint to dump the whole rotten town and start anew. All of this deranged anger Keillor delivers with aplomb and charm, and fans of the Lake Wobegon series will not be disappointed.

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