From Publishers Weekly Somewhere in the Midwest, the Darling family is in for an intricate and difficult transformation one October weekend, in Drury's lyrically bleak but oddly hopeful third novel, which follows several of the characters of his praised The End of Vandalism. Charles (aka "Tiny"), a plumber who "would fix something in such a way that it would need fixing again soon," yearns to possess a vintage double-barreled shotgun once owned by his family and currently in the possession of a minister's widow. Charles's wife, Joan, is headed to Stone City for the weekend, to attend the animal shelter convention, but winds up having an affair with her egotistical doctor. This leaves Charles stuck with the kids, an overly imaginative seven-year-old son named Micah who thinks he can see ghosts, and Lyris, 16, the daughter Joan gave up for adoption at birth and who, after a succession of foster parents, now lives with the Darlings. Meanwhile, Charles's middle-aged brother, Jerry, has taken up with Lyris's teenage friend, and Lyris herself gets involved with a local miscreant and budding arsonist. Stark in its depiction of family life going nowhere, the novel (with its title inspired by Tennyson and its domestic drama reminiscent of Rick Moody's The Ice Storm) describes smalltowners who must compromise their unruly desires, and confront their failures and weaknesses. Charles, trapped in his well-meaning but blundering ways, may be able to defend Lyris's honor, but he cannot hold his family together. The children likewise do their best: Lyris is a scarred survivor who trusts no one, and young Micah invents playmates in a town devoid of excitement. Those who do manage to break out of their daily existence, like Joan, face the horrifying prospect of a life beyond the accepted pattern, where one finds not freedom but an abyss of confusion. Drury portrays this potential unmooring with persuasive clarity. His gift for dead-on realism and unfussy dialogue reveals the humorous, edgy pathos of his characters and invests his story with the ambiguity of real life and the poignancy of unrealized dreams. Author tour. (May) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal You could call this novel warm and funny and you wouldn't be wrong, although wry and weirdly edgy is probably closer to the mark. Here, Drury returns to small-town life, a setting similar to that of his first novel, the well-received The End of Vandalism (LJ 1/94). He focuses on one family, each member of which is in perpetual motion and filled with yearning. Charles, the father, longs for an heirloom gun that sits above the fireplace of a minister's widow--a longing so great he is willing to risk arrest. Joan, his wife, would seem to want out of her marriage, although her thoughts don't necessarily line up so clearly. Nevertheless, she ends up in a hotel room with the local doctor, certainly a good start. Their young son, Micah, wants to push beyond the boundaries of his world and spends his nights roaming through town. And as for Lyris, a teenager who has only recently been reunited with birthmother Joan through the efforts of the radical group Home Bringers, all she wants is a family. Certainly things fall apart, but at the same time and in a nearly magical way, they begin to come together. Drury is an absolutely delightful writer who has carved out a world of his own in American fiction, one that is odd, revealing, and yet filled with love.-Brian Kenney, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. See all Editorial Reviews
發表於2024-11-20
Hunts in Dreams 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤:
Hunts in Dreams 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載