Natural History: Stories
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)

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Average Rating
Contributors
Published
HighBridge , 2022.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

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Description

"A masterful new collection of interconnected stories, from the renowned National Book Award-winning author. In Natural History, Andrea Barrett completes the beautiful arc of intertwined lives of a family of scientists, teachers, and innovators that she has been weaving through multiple books since her National Book Award-winning collection, Ship Fever. The six exquisite stories in Natural History are set largely in a small community in central New York state and portray some of her most beloved characters, spanning the decades between the Civil War to the present day. In "Henrietta and Her Moths," a woman tends to an insect nursery as her sister's life follows a different path. In "Open House," a young man grapples with a choice between a thrilling lifespent discovering fossils and a desire to remain close to home. And in the magnificent title novella, "Natural History," Barrett deepens the connection between her characters, bringing us through to the present day and providing an unforgettable capstone. Told with Barrett's characteristic elegance, passion for science, and wonderful eye for the natural world, the psychologically astute and moving stories gathered in this collection evoke the ways women's lives and expectations-in families, in work, and in love-have shifted across a century and more. Building upon one another, these tales brilliantly culminate to reveal how the smallest events of the past can have large reverberations across the generations, and how potent, wondrous, and strange the relationship between history and memory can be"--

More Details

Format
eAudiobook
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
10/11/2022
Language
English
ISBN
9781696609005

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The characters in Unsworth's and Barrett's novels explore the world, offering insights about history and nature to their readers through precise description and evocative prose. Barrett develops her characters more deeply, but readers of each author will be rewarded by reading the other. -- Katherine Johnson
Infusing their historical fiction with a passion for science, both Rebecca Stott and Andrea Barrett draw readers back in time with a leisurely pace and sensual detail, exposing characters' longings and motives within complex plots. Barrett's style is more lyrical than Stott's, but readers will find both equally immersive. -- Jen Baker
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Readers new to Barrett will be entranced by the intricate beauty of her prose, her acute sense of place, and the vibrant inner lives and daring decisions of her intriguing and unusual characters. Readers who have been spellbound by her previous works, from Ship Fever (1996) to Archangel (2013), will have the added pleasure of reuniting with some of Barrett's protagonists, especially scientist turned high-school science teacher Henrietta Atkins. Here we encounter Henrietta in her New York State village both as an adult and a precocious girl during the Civil War who is hired out to a family with two sons missing in action. Spiraling through time and Henrietta's "complicated family tree," these subtly linked, saturated, and enthralling tales dissect gender roles in portrayals of families running a nineteenth-century pottery business and a winery during Prohibition, a woman compiling a Civil War history but more inclined to write historical fiction, and a young woman determined to become a pilot in the wake of a disastrous 1920 air show. Then there's a provocative mirroring, a century later, of Henrietta's experiences as a pioneering woman scientist at a fateful summer gathering in the Adirondacks. Barrett transforms deep knowledge of history, science, and human nature into gorgeously vital and insightful stories in which every element is richly brewed, mulled, and redolent.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

National Book Award winner Barrett (Ship Fever) offers a finely crafted linked collection about memory and science. "Wonders of the Shore," named after a fictional 1889 study of marine life by Daphne Bannister, introduces the close and longtime friendship between Daphne and Henrietta Atkins, a lepidopterist and schoolteacher in Central New York. In the brilliant and complex "The Regimental History," 10-year-old Henrietta takes dictation for a family whose two sons enlisted in the Union Army and catalogs the sons' letters. The story ends more than a quarter century later with a meeting between Henrietta and the soldiers' nephew with an amateur historian, in which Henrietta's sharp memory yields striking revelations. The highlight, "The Accident," features Henrietta's niece Caroline, whose account of a life-changing aviation disaster Daphne retells after meeting Caroline at an air show in 1922. In the lengthy title story, which becomes a bit diffuse with its dizzying blending of family trees, old friends Dierdre Banks and Rose Marburg, a descendent of Henrietta, attend an annual retreat of biologists in the Adirondacks in 2018. Still, Barrett offers well-observed details of the region, and Dierdre and Rose's imbalanced friendship makes for an intriguing parallel to Henrietta and Daphne, as Rose is now a schoolteacher after showing early promise while Dierdre is a star biologist. This offers rich rewards. (Sept.)

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Library Journal Review

In six stories set mostly in central New York State, Natural History revisits the family of scientists, teachers, and innovators the expansive Barrett has featured regularly since her National Book Award-winning collection Ship Fever. From passengers quarantined while on cruise to a woman explaining to her barstool companion that she has ESP to a hyena loose in the south of France, I Walk Between the Raindrops shows off the award-winning Boyle's trenchant prose (50,000-copy first printing). In Bliss Montage, NYPL Young Lion Ma (Severance) reveals the absurdism of the everyday through push-the-envelope stories featuring a woman living with all her former boyfriends, relationships based on an invisibility drug, and the idea that burying oneself alive can cure all manner of ills (75,000-copy first printing). From prolific, icepick-exact short story writer Means, a Pushcart and O. Henry honoree, Two Nurses, Smoking explores grief and survival in pieces ranging from two nurses exchanging quiet support in a parking lot to a couple reuniting on the ski slopes after having met in a bereavement group.

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Kirkus Book Review

Henrietta Atkins and one Marburg sister return from Ship Fever (1996), Barrett's National Book Award winner, in interlinked stories ranging across half a century. Henrietta occupies center stage in the first three stories. "Wonders of the Shore" takes her to an island off the New Hampshire coast for an 1885 summer vacation with her friend Daphne. Barrett delicately contrasts Henrietta's life as a high school biology teacher in Crooked Lake, her central New York hometown, with Daphne's profitable career as a science writer and pseudonymous cookbook author; she plumbs the women's complex relationship and provides a surprise ending that reveals Henrietta making an unexpected decision about herself and her future. In "The Regimental History," she is a bright, inquisitive 10-year-old fascinated by the letters of a Union soldier, later learning of the soldier's sad decline from his nephew, who's one of her students. In fewer than 50 pages, Barrett considers the cost of war, the duplicity of leaders, and the nurturing bond between a young person and an inspired teacher. "Henrietta and Her Moths" also ranges through time to trace Henrietta's efforts to help her sister, Hester, through pregnancy and motherhood and to provide a vivid glimpse of Henrietta's ability to convey the excitement of scientific observation to her charges, including Caroline, her tempestuous niece. Caroline has become an aviator in "The Accident," which captures both the joy of flight and the cruelty of class privilege with Barrett's characteristic subtlety and cleareyed compassion. In "Open House," another of Henrietta's students faces a conflict that underpins the entire collection: The bonds that tie people to family and community are challenged by the ambition to find a place in the larger world. That theme becomes explicit in the title story, which finds Rose Marburg in 2018 reflecting on her choice to abandon scientific work that led others to a Nobel Prize. As always, Barrett depicts the natural world and the human heart with wonder, tenderness, and deep understanding. More superb work from an American master. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Readers new to Barrett will be entranced by the intricate beauty of her prose, her acute sense of place, and the vibrant inner lives and daring decisions of her intriguing and unusual characters. Readers who have been spellbound by her previous works, from Ship Fever (1996) to Archangel (2013), will have the added pleasure of reuniting with some of Barrett's protagonists, especially scientist turned high-school science teacher Henrietta Atkins. Here we encounter Henrietta in her New York State village both as an adult and a precocious girl during the Civil War who is hired out to a family with two sons missing in action. Spiraling through time and Henrietta's "complicated family tree," these subtly linked, saturated, and enthralling tales dissect gender roles in portrayals of families running a nineteenth-century pottery business and a winery during Prohibition, a woman compiling a Civil War history but more inclined to write historical fiction, and a young woman determined to become a pilot in the wake of a disastrous 1920 air show. Then there's a provocative mirroring, a century later, of Henrietta's experiences as a pioneering woman scientist at a fateful summer gathering in the Adirondacks. Barrett transforms deep knowledge of history, science, and human nature into gorgeously vital and insightful stories in which every element is richly brewed, mulled, and redolent. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

In six stories set mostly in central New York State, Natural History revisits the family of scientists, teachers, and innovators the expansive Barrett has featured regularly since her National Book Award-winning collection Ship Fever. From passengers quarantined while on cruise to a woman explaining to her barstool companion that she has ESP to a hyena loose in the south of France, I Walk Between the Raindrops shows off the award-winning Boyle's trenchant prose (50,000-copy first printing). In Bliss Montage, NYPL Young Lion Ma (Severance) reveals the absurdism of the everyday through push-the-envelope stories featuring a woman living with all her former boyfriends, relationships based on an invisibility drug, and the idea that burying oneself alive can cure all manner of ills (75,000-copy first printing). From prolific, icepick-exact short story writer Means, a Pushcart and O. Henry honoree, Two Nurses, Smoking explores grief and survival in pieces ranging from two nurses exchanging quiet support in a parking lot to a couple reuniting on the ski slopes after having met in a bereavement group.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

National Book Award winner Barrett (Ship Fever) offers a finely crafted linked collection about memory and science. "Wonders of the Shore," named after a fictional 1889 study of marine life by Daphne Bannister, introduces the close and longtime friendship between Daphne and Henrietta Atkins, a lepidopterist and schoolteacher in Central New York. In the brilliant and complex "The Regimental History," 10-year-old Henrietta takes dictation for a family whose two sons enlisted in the Union Army and catalogs the sons' letters. The story ends more than a quarter century later with a meeting between Henrietta and the soldiers' nephew with an amateur historian, in which Henrietta's sharp memory yields striking revelations. The highlight, "The Accident," features Henrietta's niece Caroline, whose account of a life-changing aviation disaster Daphne retells after meeting Caroline at an air show in 1922. In the lengthy title story, which becomes a bit diffuse with its dizzying blending of family trees, old friends Dierdre Banks and Rose Marburg, a descendent of Henrietta, attend an annual retreat of biologists in the Adirondacks in 2018. Still, Barrett offers well-observed details of the region, and Dierdre and Rose's imbalanced friendship makes for an intriguing parallel to Henrietta and Daphne, as Rose is now a schoolteacher after showing early promise while Dierdre is a star biologist. This offers rich rewards. (Sept.)

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Barrett, A., & Schnaubelt, T. (2022). Natural History: Stories (Unabridged). HighBridge.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Barrett, Andrea and Teri Schnaubelt. 2022. Natural History: Stories. HighBridge.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Barrett, Andrea and Teri Schnaubelt. Natural History: Stories HighBridge, 2022.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Barrett, A. and Schnaubelt, T. (2022). Natural history: stories. Unabridged HighBridge.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Barrett, Andrea, and Teri Schnaubelt. Natural History: Stories Unabridged, HighBridge, 2022.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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