Hunter's Horn
<div><P> Michigan State University Press is proud to announce the re-release of Harriette Simpson Arnow's 1949 novel <I>Hunter's Horn</I>, a work that Joyce Carol Oates called "our most unpretentious American masterpiece."  <br>     In <I>Hunter's Horn</I>, Arnow has written the quintessential account of Kentucky hill people€"the quintessential novel of Southern Appalachian farmers, foxhunters, foxhounds, women, and children. New York Times reviewer Hirschel Brickell declared that Arnow "writes...as effortlessly as a bird sings, and the warmth, beauty, the sadness and the ache of life itself are not even once absent from her pages."  <br>     Arnow writes about Kentucky in the way that William Faulkner writes about Mississippi, that Flannery O'Connor writes about Georgia, or that Willa Cather writes about Nebraska€"with studied realism, with landscapes and characters that take on mythic proportions, with humor, and with memorable and remarkable attention to details of the human heart that motivate literature.</P></div>