This cherished classic of rural American life was a popular
success when it first appeared in the last quarter of the nineteenth
century. By the early twentieth century, it was nationally acclaimed by
critics for its realistic portrayal of a vanishing phase of American
life. Today it is considered a milestone in American literature, a
monument to regional writing. Edward Eggleston's account of the
adventures of a young schoolmaster in a nineteenth-century school system
presents a vivid and readable chapter in the history of America and
American education.