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  1. You Can't Go Home Again is a novel by Thomas Wolfe published posthumously in 1940, extracted by his editor, Edward Aswell, from the contents of his vast unpublished manuscript The October Fair.

  2. Quick answer: Thomas Wolfe's famous quote about going home again is "You can't go home again." This phrase, explored in his novel, signifies that returning to one's past is impossible...

  3. Of Time and the River (subtitled A Legend of Man's Hunger in his Youth) is a 1935 novel by American author Thomas Wolfe.

  4. Wolfe's novels, and how it led him to—and illuminates—his eventual realization that, after all, you can't go home again. I pay particular attention to two of the most striking and pervasive forms his effort took: the "recapture" of the past; and the sudden attribution of new and immense significance to moments out of lost time which originally

  5. The sequel to Thomas Wolfe's remarkable first novel, Look Homeward, Angel, Of Time and the River is one of the great classics of American literature.

  6. George Webber has written a successful novel about his family and hometown. When he returns to that town he is shaken by the force of the outrage and hatred that greets him. Family and friends feel naked and exposed by the truths they have seen in his book, and their fury drives him from his home.

  7. Of Time and the River, novel by Thomas Wolfe, begun in 1931 and, after extensive editing by Wolfe and editor Maxwell Perkins, published in 1935 as a sequel to Look Homeward, Angel (1929). The book chronicles the maturing of Eugene Gant as he leaves his Southern home for the wider world of Harvard University, New York City, and Europe.