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Spanning the explosive settlement of the American West, Cimarron is a sweeping epic of ambition, conflict, and survival on the Oklahoma frontier. Edna Ferber's powerful novel follows the restless pioneers who risk everything in the great land rush, carving towns and fortunes out of raw territory while confronting violence, injustice, and rapid social change. At the heart of the story are complex men and women driven by courage, desire, and an unrelenting belief in progress-even when that progress comes at a steep human cost. Rich in historical detail and emotional scope, Cimarron captures the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Spanning the explosive settlement of the American West, Cimarron is a sweeping epic of ambition, conflict, and survival on the Oklahoma frontier. Edna Ferber's powerful novel follows the restless pioneers who risk everything in the great land rush, carving towns and fortunes out of raw territory while confronting violence, injustice, and rapid social change. At the heart of the story are complex men and women driven by courage, desire, and an unrelenting belief in progress-even when that progress comes at a steep human cost. Rich in historical detail and emotional scope, Cimarron captures the energy of a nation pushing westward, revealing both the promise and the price of expansion. From dusty boomtowns to the halls of political power, Ferber presents a vivid portrait of American life in transition. A landmark of classic American fiction, Cimarron remains a compelling read for anyone interested in the history of the American West, frontier life, and the forces that shaped modern America.
Autorenporträt
Edna Ferber (1885-1968) was one of the most influential American writers of the twentieth century, celebrated for her sweeping novels that captured the energy, contradictions, and ambitions of American life.Born in Michigan and raised in the Midwest, Ferber drew deeply from regional history and firsthand observation, transforming local stories into national epics. Her novels often explore themes of expansion, identity, social change, and the cost of progress, with a particular focus on strong, complex female characters navigating male-dominated worlds.Ferber achieved both critical and popular success during her lifetime. Several of her novels-including So Big, Show Boat, Giant, and Cimarron-were adapted into major motion pictures, helping to shape the cultural imagination of America's past. So Big won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1925, cementing her reputation as a major literary figure.Blending historical scope with emotional depth, Edna Ferber's work remains widely read and studied today, offering vivid portraits of the people and forces that helped define modern America.