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“Randolph . . . brings the Sandhills of western Nebraska vividly to life, as experience by one plucky young woman.... ( more ) ”—BOOKLIST

ladette randolph

Author of A Sandhills Ballad

Media

Write on 4 Corners Radio Interview

Colgate University Reading/ youtube

About the Author

Ladette Randolph

Photo by Tami Turnbull

Ladette Randolph is the author of the novel A Sandhills Ballad and the short story collection This is Not the Tropics as well as the editor of two anthologies: A Different Plain and The Big Empty. She has published stories and essays in numerous literary journals. Currently the editor-in-chief of the journal Ploughshares and on the faculty at Emerson College, she was, for many years, an acquiring editor at University of Nebraska Press and prior to that the managing editor of Prairie Schooner. She is the recipient of three Nebraska Book Awards, a Rona Jaffe grant, a Pushcart Prize, a Virginia Faulkner award, and has been reprinted in Best New American Voices. ( more )

Books by Ladette Randolph

A Sandhills Ballad The Big Empty This is Not the Tropics A Different Plain

Latest Reviews

praise for A Sandhills Ballad :
“" . . . [a] quietly moving first novel." -- New York Times Book Review”

—New York Times Book Review

praise for A Sandhills Ballad :
“We never think we're good enough. Often, we think we deserve the bad that happens to us. It's a kind of sickness, this self-hatred, and it can swamp a life. In this bleak, familiar novel, Ladette Randolph paints a picture of two decades of a life dedicated to penance. Mary Rasmussen was driving the car that got hit by the truck that killed her young husband and forced doctors to amputate her leg. "She instantly saw herself as she always had in relation to the vastness of the sky: small vulnerable, fragile,momentary, free of scrutiny, silent. she was here now and someday she would be gone. Her disability and her new status as widow were not the beginning of feelings of inconsequence. There was a grim comfort in being reminded of what she had always believed was her true place in the scheme of things." In the kind, good family of Nebraska ranchers she comes from, there is very little talking done. Mary, subconsciously, devises her own punishment: marry the horrible self-satisfied preacher with the short teeth and fastidious morals, a man who will surely make her life and the lives of their four children a living hell. He forces them to live in the ramshackle parsonage, insisting that their comfort is of no importance. He denies her every possible pleasure and is the embodiment of the terrifying ability one human can have to ruin another person's life in a thousand small ways. Randolph has worked hard to get the Sandhills language right; she clearly has enormous respect for the ranching culture. This creates a kind of density of detail in the novel, sometimes at the expense of transitions (for example, the births of their four children, which happens in a few pages). but this is not grave--Mary's focus on detail is, after all, one of the things that keeps her alive. Born with the gift of premonition, she must learn, in spite of the preacher who tries to substitute faith for kindness, how to trust her own intuition.  Susan Reynolds--LA Times”

—Los Angeles Times

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