Showing posts with label Coming of Age. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coming of Age. Show all posts

Monday, January 29, 2024

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett



I don't know which Ann Patchett book I like more, "Tom Lake" or "The Dutch House." I enjoyed them both, but I can't pick a favorite. Patchett is good at writing about families and the dynamics that exist, and her writing is excellent, as are her characters.

As the country began to shut down for the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Lara and Joe gathered their three daughters on their Michigan farm to help bring in the cherry crop. Seeking to relieve the tedious work, Lara recounts her life before marriage when she was briefly a successful actress and had a fling with a now-famous actor. Typecast to forever play Emily in "Our Town," she reprieves the role at a summer theater production and quickly becomes involved with the handsome and talented Pete Duke. As the cherries get picked and her past is revealed, sometimes uncomfortably, Lara's daughters begin to see their mother in a new light and question some of the choices she made and, in turn, their own decisions.

This is a story about the different types of love we experience, the heartbreaks, and the families we surround ourselves with throughout our lives. It is an engaging read with characters who are flawed but whose redeeming qualities outweigh their negative aspects. Always insightful and sometimes heartbreaking, this is another winner from Ann Patchett. 

5/5 stars.

For more information:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Under the Storm by Christoffer Carlsson


What an interesting book. Unlike most police procedurals that focus on finding a perpetrator, this book looks more at the lives of those associated with the murder and what has happened to them over the years. It is an engaging and beautifully crafted novel that is by turns unsettling and embracing.

Rookie policeman Vidar Jorgensson is the first on the scene of a house fire, where he finds the body of murder victim Lovisa Markstrom in the ashes. Vidar also discovers the unconscious body of Lovisa's lover, Edvard Christensson, nearby and evidence he had been in the house before Lovisa's death. Edvard and the male members of his family have a history of violence and bad decisions, and it isn't long before he is arrested and convicted of Lovisa's murder. Edvard's ten-year-old nephew, Isak Nyqvist, who adores and defends his uncle, is soon an outcast among his peer group, setting his life path on an unexpected trajectory that intertwines with the young policeman.

The years pass, and although Vidor was on the periphery of the investigation., he can't stop revisiting the crime in his spare time. Edvard has never stopped saying he is innocent, and Vidor starts believing him, but how can he prove it with little evidence?

This is a mystery and a coming-of-age story as the reader follows Isak through his teen and young adult years. It is an expertly plotted and well-written book whose characters are nicely drawn. Carlsson is an award-winning Swedish writer, and this book is already an international bestseller. I'm so happy to have found this book and author.

4.5/5 stars.

Thank you, NetGalley and Hogarth Books, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. The publication date is February 27, 2024.

For more information:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Friday, October 27, 2023

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver



I am always pleasantly surprised when a heavily hyped book lives up to my expectations. When I'm disappointed, I often wonder what's wrong with me--what am I not seeing? With this book, there was never any doubt about missing something; I don't like it when an author puts so many obstacles in the protagonist's path that it is downright depressing, which this was.

My problems with the book began with the writing. I don't usually mind first-person narratives, but this was so disjointed I could never get in a reading flow--I often had to go back and reread sentences/paragraphs to make sense of them u. I also tire of the characters continually exploiting the boy, Demon Copperhead.

What I liked about the main character was how he rolled with the punches. Despite his abuse in the social services system, he always seemed to make the best of it. I admit I stopped reading at about 80% when it was apparent that, once again, he was going to be led down a dark path; I couldn't take any more.

I don't usually review books I have not finished, but I had invested so much time in this book and had such strong feelings that I decided to put my thoughts down anyway. 2 stars.

For more information:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble


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