![]() ![]() It seems to describe the loose wandering of the Ward family as they try to carve out a civilized existence in the West and, Susan hopes, to return to the East as successes. The title, seemingly taken from Foote's writings, is an engineering term for the angle at which soil finally settles after, for example, being dumped from a mine as tailings. In 1998, the Modern Library ranked Angle of Repose #82 on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century.Įxplanation of the novel's title While Stegner's defenders have claimed that he had received permission to use Foote's writings, as the book's acknowledgments page implies, others point out that he secured that permission only after falsely claiming that his novel would not use any direct quotations. Stegner's use of substantial passages from Foote's actual letters as the correspondence of his fictional character Susan Burling Ward was and remains controversial among some scholars. ![]() The novel is directly based on the letters of Mary Hallock Foote, later published as A Victorian Gentlewoman in the Far West. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1972. ![]() Angle of Repose is a 1971 novel by Wallace Stegner about a wheelchair-using historian, Lyman Ward, who has lost connection with his son and living family and decides to write about his frontier-era grandparents. ![]()
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