You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

These High, Green Hills (Mitford Series #3) » (Reissue)

Book cover image of These High, Green Hills (Mitford Series #3) by Jan Karon

Authors: Jan Karon
ISBN-13: 9780140257939, ISBN-10: 0140257934
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: April 1997
Edition: Reissue

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Jan Karon

If you have ever wanted to settle down in an idyllic small town and live a life focused on faith and family, Jan Karon's books are for you. Her Mitford series follows a rural town, its inhabitants and its rector with humor, sentiment and a foundation of Christian values that help characters overcome setbacks.

Book Synopsis

This popular bestseller has been repackaged with a new reader's guide for group discussion and personal reflection. Discover what happens on a wilderness trip that sends Father Tim home a changed man.

Publishers Weekly

This third in the Mitford series (At Home in Mitforda 1996 ABBY Book of the Year finalistand Light in the Window) is another sympathetic portrayal of small-town Southern life with just enough drama to carry the plot and gracefully developed portraits of endearing characters. Allusions to past events and cameos by peripheral characters will delight the fan but may frustrate the reader new to Karon's work. Mitford is a Southeastern mountain town where everyone turns out for benefactress Sadie Baxter's birthday, where the police chief gives copies of Southern Living to inmatesand where social trouble brews in a hillbilly enclave across the creek. Episcopal minister Timothy Kavanagh of Lord's Chapel is the pivotal character. A lifelong bachelor adjusting to marriage for the first time at 63, he has no perspective on his faith and future until he and his new wife, Cynthia, are lostand foundin a cave on a youth-group camping trip. Most compelling in Timothy's affectionately drawn flock are the young people. Thirteen-year-old Dooley Barlowe was abandoned at the rectory and now struggles to adjust to Timothy's Pygmalion efforts; Lacey Turner, also 13, is saved from her father's abuse as much by Timothy as by social services. Like glass chips tumbling in a kaleidoscope, the people at Mitford fall neatly into place at story's end, having provided a cozy and satisfying read. Author tour. (Aug.)

Table of Contents

Subjects