a place in the sun,Raintree County, butterfield 8, elizabeth taylor, lauren bacall, montgomery clift



Raintree County

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEinRii8yfYb-oOR_e85F7sCRchsDa-iFzYfzTiIjtrMeMKoYEaQZobSkAFXB4qWdNpmXRpcVAM_JW0cOSkmUNjOV81F8kCzyJmSKJ2Gg0CXrMb9CZ_0dMjvSkAinTgNyTYtJeLTJebG1X40/s1600/RCcoThum.jpg"Once long ago when I reread Raintree County, I had a momentary impulse to write a literary critique, something I never do, to be called 'He Came, and Ye Knew Him Not.' By him I meant the author of 'the great American novel.'" --From "Raintree County Sixty Years Later: A Remembrance" by H. Wouk, Forward to the CRP Edition.

In September, 2007, Chicago Review Press brought Raintree County back into print. The press used the original 1948 formatting, pagination, and images. Cover painting is by Clemente Botelho.

Founded in 1973, Chicago Review Press is independent and was called by Publisher's Weekly "the fifth fastest growing small press in the United States." They are the parent company of Independent Publishers Group, "the third-largest book distributor in the US." So Raintree County is in good hands. They are to date best known for non-fiction; Raintree County will be among their first titles in fiction.

Raintree County should be available in every major bookstore in the USA.




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