8.4 /10 1 Votes8.4
Language English Pages 485 pp Originally published 1988 Genre Speculative fiction Country United States of America | 4.2/5 Publication date 1988 ISBN 0-8050-0921-3 Publisher Henry Holt and Company | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Media type Print (hardback & paperback) Similar Confessions of a barbarian, Fire on the Mountain, Black Sun, Hayduke Lives, Down the River |
The Fool's Progress is a novel written by American author Edward Abbey (1927–1989), published in 1988.
Contents
The book is a semi-autobiographical novel about a man, Henry Holyoak Lightcap, who refuses to submit to modern commercial society. Unlike Abbey's most famous fiction work, The Monkey Wrench Gang, which concerns the use of sabotage to protest environmentally damaging activities in the American Southwest, The Fool's Progress focuses on the journey of Henry across America. Edward Abbey considered it to be his "fat masterpiece." It was the final book published in his lifetime; his final novel was Hayduke Lives.
Plot
After Henry Lightcap's wife storms out of the house and his life, Lightcap decides to drive across the country journeying to his childhood home in West Virginia.
Reception
In a review for The New York Times, Howard Coale said it was "a particularly self-involved novel" and while praising the sentimental moments of the book, he notes "Unfortunately they are drowned out to almost a murmur by the harpings of a slightly malevolent and self-indulgent voice." Genaro Gonzalez, writing for the Los Angeles Times, gave it "an eager recommendation" Publishers Weekly gave it a positive review calling it "an epic exploration of Abbey's passionate loves and hatreds."