7 rows · · Jeannette Haien is the author of the acclaimed novel The All of It, winner of the Sue Kaufman 4/5(18). THE ALL OF IT. by Jeannette Haien / Foreword by Ann Patchett. "I found a terrific out of print novel by Jeanette Haien called The All of It, had it put back into print, and took it with me on tour. In bookstores all across the country I told people why they should read it, and the people snapped it up. The All of It even landed on a few paperback bestseller lists. · After more than thirty-five years as a professional concert pianist and music teacher, Jeannette Haien, in her 60s, began her second career as a novelist. Her first novel, The All of It, published in , garnered the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the /5.
Jeannette Haien's exquisite, awardwinningfirst novel is a deceptively simplestory that resonates with the powerof a modern-day myth—an unforgettablenarrative of transgression, empathy,and, ultimately, absolution. BALLARD--Jeannette Haien, died on Septem after a precipitous decline in health following a heart attack on July Born in the early s to a small DutchAmerican family, Jeannette was the youngest of four children. Demonstrating precocious talents in both writing and music, Jeannette was home-schooled with her brothers before attending the University of Michigan; in , The All of It by Jeannette Haien (David R. Godine: $; pp.) By Richard Eder Aug. 3, 12 AM PT.
Jeannette Haien is the author of the acclaimed novel The All of It, winner of the Sue Kaufman. The All of It. by Jeannette Haien. The All of It is an exquisitely told story of sin and understanding. As a frustrated Father Declan de Loughry fishes for salmon in inclement Irish weather, he mulls over the events of the previous days. Four days ago, while performing the last rites on a dying husband, he learned that the couple was never married and, in fact, are brother and sister. THE ALL OF IT. by Jeannette Haien ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 20, Carefully wrought and sensitive novella about an Irish priest who comes upon love late in life. While fly-fishing--without much hope of a catch--in a rain-swollen salmon stream in the country, Father Declan, 63, thinks over the events of the past few days, which, as it turns out, are to change his life.
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