Bobbie  Ann Mason’s debut novel—"a brilliant and moving book... a moral tale  that entwines public history with private anguish." —Los Angeles Times Book Review
“How Ms. Mason conjures a vivid image of the futility of war and its searing legacy of confusion out of the searching questions or a naïve later generation is nothing short of masterful.” —Kansas City Star
Samantha “Sam” Hughes is in her senior year of high school in rural  Kentucky. Her father, whom she never knew, was killed in Vietnam before she  was born. Sam lives with her uncle Emmett, a veteran who appears to be  suffering from exposure to Agent Orange. Amidst worrying about her uncle and  yearning to figure out who she is and learn about the father she never knew,  Sam develops feelings for Tom, one of Emmett''s veteran buddies. Tom and  Emmett attempt to shield Sam from the truth of what they endured, but she has  become convinced that her life is bound to the war in Vietnam.
In Country is both a powerful and touching novel of America’s  ghosts and a beautiful portrayal of a family, not unlike many others, left  bruised and twisted by the war. At the time of its publication in 1985,  Richard Eder’s rave LA Times review concluded: “One of the questions  for post-war American literature, dealt with variously by Updike, Cheever,  Roth, Salinger and a host of others, is whether the larger capacities of the  human spirit can be exercised, so to speak, in a motel room equipped with  color TV and a drinks refrigerator. The answers vary; Mason has found her own  striking variety of ‘yes.’”
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