Heroes of the Frontier by Dave Eggers 385 pages

Dave Eggers never repeats himself; each of his books is unlike anything he has written before.  In his most recent work, he tells the story of  Josie, a woman who suddenly leaves for Alaska with her two children, Paul age 8 and Ana 5.  Traveling across the state in an old RV she has rented that does not exceed 48 miles an hour, Josie ponders her history and the people who she feels have been responsible for her flight from Ohio.

Heroes of the Frontier is both poignant and funny, and Josie is a wonderfully drawn character who grabs her readers, despite her flaws.  Seldom can a male writer get into the head of a female character and depict her in an honest, realistic way.  Dave Eggers is one of those male authors.

Heroes of the Frontier by Dave Eggers 385 pages

The Unseen World by Liz Moore 441 pages

Ada Sibelius lives an unconventional childhood.  She is raised by a single father, is home schooled, and her only friends are her dad’s colleagues at a computer lab at a prestigious Boston university.  When she is twelve, as her father’s thinking becomes foggy and his memory fails, Ada, with the help of her father’s close friend, begins to live a more typical life.  And when her father must go into a nursing home, she is forced to see that her father, David Sibelius, is not who he claims to be.

The Unseen World is an enjoyable read, for the most part.  However, the ending left me flat.  It was predictable, silly and self-conscious.

The Unseen World by Liz Moore 441 pages

This Must Be the Place by Maggie O’Farrell 382 pages

Daniel Sullivan is retrieving his father’s ashes when he meets Claudette Wells, a world famous movie star who abandoned her high profile life to live anonymously with her young son.  Thus begins Daniel and Claudette’s lives together in an very isolated part of Ireland.  Told from different points of view, This Must Be the Place is Daniel’s story from his Catholic upbringing in Brooklyn to his college years in England to his first marriage in California to his life with Claudette.  At the onset of the novel, the reader begins to learn that Daniel is suddenly paying for the mistakes he made when he was young and the secrets he told no one.

O’Farrell writes an engaging tale with interesting, complex characters.  Another good summer read.

This Must Be the Place is on sale Tuesday, July 19th.

 

 

This Must Be the Place by Maggie O’Farrell 382 pages

Siracusa by Delia Ephron 275 pages

Taylor, Finn and their ten year old daughter, Snow, are invited by Mike and Lizzie to go to Italy with them.  Lizzie and Finn had a relationship before either of the couples were married.  Taylor is an overprotective, unrealistic mother, and Mike and Lizzie do not have children and have no idea how to relate to them.  This Italian vacations has all the makings of a disaster, which is exactly what happens when the five travelers arrive in Siracusa.

Told from each adult’s point of view, Siracusa is a good summer read-easy, interesting and, at times, a page turner.

Siracusa by Delia Ephron 275 pages

The Sympthizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen 383 pages

Winner of The Pulitzer Prize for fiction as well as several other literary awards, Viet Thanh Nguyen’s debut novel is a complex work about Viet Nam shortly after the American withdrawal.  The narrator, who remains nameless throughout, is an  army captain, half French, half Vietnamese working for both the communists and his homeland while assimilating into the American culture.  Leading a somewhat schizophrenic life, he is often unsure who to trust, believe or side with.  In many ways the narrator’s life is like his native country which has been occupied by the French, Americans and communists.

While I admired this novel, I could never immerse myself into the life of the main character.  There were more than a few instances when The Sympathizer was too subjective, too didactic and too self-conscious.

The Sympthizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen 383 pages

Before the Fall by Noah Hawley 390 pages

A private jet carrying eight passengers and three crew members is flying from Martha’s Vineyard to New York City when it crashes into the Atlantic Ocean.  Miraculously, two people survive-a painter who is on the verge of “making it” and the four year old son of a television news executive.  Writing about each passenger before the crash, Hawley is able to flesh out each character and describe what happened in that airplane minutes before the disaster.  Depicting what happens to the two survivors after, he creates conflict, suspense and intrigue.

Before the Fall is a good read but not a book club read.  After it’s been read. there’s not too much to think about.

Before the Fall by Noah Hawley 390 pages

Barkskins by Annie Proulx 736 pages

Proulx’s tome is not an easy, fun read, but well worth the effort for a diligent reader.  Barkskins traces the history of two families from 1693 to the present day.  The Duke family begins with Charles Duquet, a Frenchman who acquires Canadian land for the purpose of sawing timber and shipping it short and long distances.  Rene Sel is his indentured servant who marries marries of woman of the Mi’kmaw tribe, and has heirs who continue to practice the rituals and traditions  of their tribe for several centuries.  By following both families and what they represent, Proulx artistically depicts what has happened to the forests in North American for the last three hundred years.  In addition, she has provided her readers with a number of unique, not-to-be-forgotten characters.  Barkskins is a monumental, satisfying work of literature.

Barkskins by Annie Proulx 736 pages

Wintering by Peter Geye 320 pages

Harry Eide, at the opening of this novel, is suffering from Alzheimer’s and has wandered off into the cold Northern Minnesota winter, never to be seen again.  To understand his father better, Harry’s son, Gus, recounts to his father’s mistress the brutal winter that they wandered up north almost dying several times during their circuitous journey.  Both the mistress, Berit, and Gus believe that if they describe the past in enough detail they will understand the present.  However; the Eide family, and especially Harry, carry such a load of secrets that is is unlikely that the entire truth will ever be known.

Geye writes and interesting, highly descriptive, tale, although at times I had trouble grasping the Eide family lineage.  A family tree would have been helpful.

Wintering by Peter Geye 320 pages

They May Not Mean To, but They Do by Cathleen Schine 290 pages

Cathleen Schine has once again written an amusing, yet poignant family tale.  This time it is the story of Joy Bergman, a proud, insightful woman in her 80’s, trying to cope with her husband’s failing health.  She has loving children who want what is best for her, but what they think is best and what Joy thinks is best are often miles apart.

Schine portrays the process of aging with humor, empathy and concern.  Joy and her clan are caring, sensitive individuals who sometimes misinterpret the needs of others.  In other words-they are all quite human.

They May Not Mean to, but They Do is my kind of beach read.

Available on June 7, 2016.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

schi

They May Not Mean To, but They Do by Cathleen Schine 290 pages

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi 305 pages

I just finished this wonderful debut novel, and although it isn’t released until June 7th, I couldn’t wait to write about it.  Gyasi depicts two Ghanaian families, unknowingly related, dating back eight generations.  One family is loaded onto a slave ship and spends the next 150some years in America.  The other remains in Ghana for the most part, sometimes living peacefully with the British and other African tribes, sometimes not.  Each chapter in Homegoing is about a character in one of the families, and Gyasi begins her novel by describing the first ancestor and ends in the year 2000.  Each portrayal is honest, unique, complex and memorable.  This is the kind of book I will want to reread in a few years, so I can savor it again.

 

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi 305 pages