Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Hard Hed, the Hoosier Chapman papers, Charles Tidler

Label
Hard Hed, the Hoosier Chapman papers, Charles Tidler
Language
eng
resource.accompanyingMatter
technical information on music
Form of composition
not applicable
Format of music
not applicable
Literary text for sound recordings
fiction
Main title
Hard Hed
Responsibility statement
Charles Tidler
Sub title
the Hoosier Chapman papers
Summary
In this contemporary retelling of the Johnny Appleseed story, Tidler has created an Indiana as Faulkner created a Mississippi and Steinbeck a California. Local historian and apple orchardist Hoosier Chapman has just been released from a Northwestern Ohio jail. Having served two years for planting wild apple trees in a city park, he is dropped at the State Line by a deputy sheriff. Hoosier Chapman, barefoot, treks west into Indiana state, recreating history and inventing myth, both public and private, along the way. The historian in Chapman yearns for a pre-colonial, pre-gunpowder freedom, one that lies just beyond the common fields, before the wetlands were drained and the forests cut down. His every step is dogged by chaos and violence. Ranging in style from fantasy to realism to historical document to speculative fiction to lyric poetry, page after page Tidler's joy of craft that shows through. Part meta-story, part documentary, part violent romance, this unabashedly original work of fiction roams in and out of time and place and point of view. "Tidler takes readers on a roller-coaster of a ride, with highs and lows and mighty twists. The history of the Indiana Territory is revealed, along with the brutalizing of its original inhabitants. And the brutality never stops. ... The language is raw and crude at times, reflecting the violence of the narrative, but it is also eloquent. ...'Hard Hed: The Hoosier Chapman Papers' is an impressive achievement..." - The Times-Colonist
Target audience
adult
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable

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