The Northern Reach
by W.S. Winslow
Portrait of a small town (11/15/2020)
It's hard to describe this quirky book - it would be a terrific book club selection and I would love to hear the discussions - bet they would go on forever! While I got bogged down in all the characters ( the author provides a family tree for each family he writes about in order for you to keep track ) I really enjoyed the book.
The Northern Reach is the biography of a small town on the coast of Maine where the long winters are bitter and so are the citizens are equally nasty.
The author strips away everything to expose the painful and raw short comings of rich, poor and founding families . They are all intertwined through marriage, lust, divorce, mental illness, greed, abuse and even murder. Parents and children dislike each other and brutal relationships abound among siblings. BUT - Winslow has laced this novel with some hilarious material as well. The funeral scene is just one of the many sections of the book that made me laugh out loud - a much needed balancing of all the ugliness that takes place among these folks.
The Mountains Sing
by Nguyen Phan Que Mai
Lessons from Viet Nam (1/12/2020)
" I realized war is monstrous - if it didn't kill those it touched, it took away a piece of their souls, so they could never be whole again "
The writing in this book is sometimes beautiful and often brutal as it reveals a history of Tran family in Vietnam, giving the reader a vivid account of what it was like to live through the Land Reforms of the Communist party, the Vietnam War and its aftermath. The very strong women characters end up sacrificing everything including giving up their children, their dreams. their homes and livelihoods to try and keep their family together during the years when their country was torn apart and everything they knew was changing. It is a story of strong family love, perseverance, bravery and extraordinary acts of kindness by complete strangers.
This novel will break your heart but at the end it is an amazing story of endurance and you come away with an understanding of what it was like for those living in Vietnam during the war.
An interesting and emotional read although you have to pay attention as the author chose to go back and forth every chapter from the 1940s and 50s to the years after the war. It takes a little concentration to keep all the characters and time lines straight but it is worth the effort.
If I Forget You
by Thomas Christopher Greene
I Love a Good Love Story (4/16/2016)
When reading If I Forget You, I felt that the plot was predictable at times but that did not deter from an enjoyable reading experience. The college romance between Henry Gould, a poor Jewish poet, and Margot, the daughter from a wealthy family with all the advantages, abruptly ends leaving both of the lovers with a sense of failure and loneliness for what could have been that follows them into adulthood. The author pulled me in emotionally when the two run into each other 20 years later. This leads to an entertaining story that poses lots of questions about the events that unfold and the secrets that are exposed and how they are handled. This would be a great book club book as there is much to ponder and discuss. A good read to share with others or just enjoy by yourself. As the author writes : " love like this is far closer to insanity than it is to reality"