Jim Harrison has been called a writer with immortality in him by Londons Sunday Times and The New York Times Book Review has written that [his] storytelling instincts are nearly flawless. Harrisons last novel, Returning to Earth, was one of his most praised in years, hailed by The Plain Dealer as an artistic achievement worthy of Faulkner. The English Major is a wryly funny novel that sparkles with the generous humanity of his vision. It used to be Cliff and Vivian and now it isnt. With these words, Jim Harrison begins a riotous, moving novel that sends a sixty-something man, divorced and robbed of his farm by a late-blooming real estate shark of an exwife, on a road trip across America, armed with a childhood puzzle of the United States and a mission to rename all the states and state birds to overcome the banal names men have given them. Cliff s adventures take him through a whirlwind affair with a former student from his high schoolteacher days twenty-some years before, to a snake farm in Arizona owned by an old classmate; and to the highoctane existence of his son, a big-time movie producer who has just bought an apartment over the Presidio in San Francisco. The English Major is the map of a mans journey intoand out ofhimself, and it is vintage Harrisonreflective, big-picture American, and replete with wicked wit.