Alice McDermotts powerful novel is a vivid portrait of an American family in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Witty, compassionate, and wry, it captures the social, political, and spiritual upheavals of those decades through the experiences of a middle-class couple, their four children, and the changing worlds in which they live.  While Michael and Annie Keane taste the alternately intoxicating and bitter first fruits of the sexual revolution, their older, more tentative brother, Jacob, lags behind, until he finds himself on the way to Vietnam. Meanwhile, Clare, the youngest child of their aging parents, seeks to maintain an almost saintly innocence. After This, alive with the passions and tragedies of a determining era in our history, portrays the clash of traditional, faith-bound life and modern freedom, while also capturing, with McDermotts inimitable understanding and grace, the joy, sorrow, anger, and love that underpin, and undermine, what it is to be a family.
A lot like "Flesh and Blood"; a story that follows one family from the parents' meeting to the coming of age of the youngest child. This was hard for me to put down. The ending leaves you wondering what will happen to this family.
Tracey R. (tratz) from APPLETON, WI wrote on 3/31/2008...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
I really did not enjoy this book. The story was boring and didn't have much going on. Easily forgotten.
Genevieve L. from PALMYRA, NJ wrote on 2/28/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
A sad look into the lives of an ordinary middle class family in Long Island in the 50s and 60s. Their troubles were our troubles, their view of the world, ours.
Theresa B. (readreddog) from MORRISTOWN, TN wrote on 2/23/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Quite somber. An in depth look at a so called typical family in the 60's. Not for someone looking for a romance book. I enjoyed the book because there was a lot I could associate with. An easy read and fast.
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Karen W. (Karen88) from LIVINGSTON, NJ wrote on 7/14/2008...
I like her books. Much of it is written from the children's point of view of adult life. Good read.
Kirsten W. (wardbunch) from DALLAS, TX wrote on 7/27/2007...