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A number of the stories in Glenn Meeter's Stories of Four Decades have been reprinted (most frequently "Hard Row" and "A Harvest"), but they all made their first appearance in publications as diverse as The Atlantic Monthly, Redbook, Epoch, The Literary Review, and The Reformed Journal. Each story has its own individual appeal. Each has its own style, theme, mood, its own plot and setting, and its own cast of characters who come fully to life only within its boundaries. Even Peter Heitz, in The Oppressor, has different problems and preoccupations from the slightly older character with the same…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A number of the stories in Glenn Meeter's Stories of Four Decades have been reprinted (most frequently "Hard Row" and "A Harvest"), but they all made their first appearance in publications as diverse as The Atlantic Monthly, Redbook, Epoch, The Literary Review, and The Reformed Journal. Each story has its own individual appeal. Each has its own style, theme, mood, its own plot and setting, and its own cast of characters who come fully to life only within its boundaries. Even Peter Heitz, in The Oppressor, has different problems and preoccupations from the slightly older character with the same name in The Convert. But set with others in a collection that touches major points in life-stories of "Youth" followed by those of "Marriage" and "Parenthood" and finally "New Journeys"-each story takes on new dimensions. Together they form a tableau of life in the American Midwest (and California, a mid-century Mecca for Midwesterners) from the forties through the seventies. One thinks of the "slow clank clank of tire chains" on mall-town winter streets in the first story; the visitors to Grandmother's house paying Chicago tolls in the last; and, in between, Lost Angeles freeways and South Dakota gravel roads. Another dimension is as ancient as Joseph in Egypt: the clash of rural and village culture with urban modernity. Some characters need to break away from the village culture (faith, family, community); some lose it and re-create it. Some seek it out. All need to re-interpret it. And all struggle to maintain and pass on some aspects of that culture, if only the awed thankfulness of the traveler in "A Harvest," who exclaims about his own journey, "but my God what a delight, just to travel through!"
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Autorenporträt
Born in 1934 in Hammond, Indiana, GLENN MEETER graduated from Calvin College in 1955 and married Marlene Meyerink of Platte, South Dakota, that same year before earning his masters degree at Vanderbilt University. From 1956 1960 he taught English at Illiana Christian High School in Lansing, Illinois, where his and Marlenes first daughter was born, and sold his first short story, The Son-in-Law, which paid for the birth of their second daughter.

In 1960-1964 the family moved to Iowa City, where Glenn worked on his doctorate. From 1964-1969 they lived in Los Angeles, where a son and a third daughter were born, while Glenn taught at U.S.C. and wrote The Convert, Dont You Remember Me?, A Harvest, and Waiting for Daddy.

Since 1969 the family has lived in DeKalb, Illinois, where Glenn wrote the Opressor, suggested by their life in Los Angeles; Hard Row, inspired by childhood memories wakened by his oldest daughters de-tasseling corn in DeKalb County fields; and Infidelity, from speculation suggested by his second daughters dance lessons in Chicago. In 1981 Sunday and Grandmothers House, based on Illinois memories from the forties and the seventies, appeared in his novel Letters to Barbara.

Glenn retired as Professor of English from Northern Illinois University, where he served as English Department Chair 1984-1990, in 1998. In 1995, he published Pastorale, based on early childhood memories and inspired, no doubt, by the lives of his young grandchildren. Most recently he wrote, for this collection, Starting from Dakota, a story that goes back, although it is set in 1960, to the 1955 wedding that marked the beginning of both his family and, in the Son-in-Law, his writing career.