"A Nebraska classic."—Saul Bellow "That Wright Morris in his photographs seems to produce an indecent invasion of the privacy of his text is a tribute to his accurate and selective descriptive powers."—<i>New York Times</i> "A pathbreaking and still unique example of the integration of photographs and narrative text."—Alan Trachtenberg "An extremely able photographer and a first-rate writer."—<i>San Francisco Chronicle</i> "A fine piece of Americana."—<i>Library Journal</i> "A superb and . . . revolutionary wedding of prose and pictures, a kind of new art form." —<i>Omaha World-Herald</i>
This account in first-person narrative and photographs of the one-day visit of Clyde Muncy to "the home place" at Lone Tree, Nebraska, has been called "as near to a new fiction form as you could get." Both prose and pictures are homely: worn linoleum, an old man's shoes, well-used kitchen utensils, and weathered siding. Muncy's journey of discovery takes the measure of the man he has become and of what he has left behind.