Search - Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant

Used Book ~ Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant by author Anne Tyler
 
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
Author: Anne Tyler
Book Information
Publisher: Ivy Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating: 19

ISBN-13: 9780425098684 - ISBN-10: 0425098680
Publication Date: 3/1/1983

Book Description:
"A book that should join those few that every literate person will have to read."
THE BOSTON GLOBE
Pearl Tull is nearing the end of her life but not her memory. Ever since 1944 when her husband left her, she has raised her three very different children on her own. Now grown, they have gathered together--with anger, with hope, and with a beautiful, harsh, and dazzling story to tell....

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Genres:
Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Paperback, Paperback, Hardcover


Rate These Member Reviews

Kay P. from CHARLESTOWN, NH wrote on 5/7/2007...


A book that will touch you heart.

Dee R. (lotsabooks) from FEDERAL WAY, WA wrote on 12/27/2006...


Another great Anne Tyler book. This is about the Tull family: Pearl, Buck, Jenny, Cody and Ezra.

Caitlin K. from S PASADENA, FL wrote on 10/21/2005...


Never read it.

Cindy D. (sojourner) from MANCHESTER, GA wrote on 8/11/2005...


Set in Baltimore, Maryland, in the 1960s, Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant opens with an aged Pearl musing upon her life and giving instructions to her younger son, Ezra, to invite everyone in her address book to her funeral. And who is in that book? Beck, of course. He never divorced Pearl, but he walked away from the family when their children, Cody, Ezra, and Jenny were fourteen, eleven, and nine years of age, respectively. When Cody graduates from high school, Pearl muses about her nearly-grown children: “Beck would not have known them, and they, perhaps, would not have known Beck. They never asked about him. Didn’t that show how little importance a father has? The invisible man. The absent presence. Pearl felt a tinge of angry joy.” Pearl continues to be proud of what she has done on her own; and certainly, all three of Pearl and Beck’s children, by employment and outward appearances, become successful adults. Cody is an efficiency consultant, Ezra is a restaurant owner and Jenny is a pediatrician. Pearl has every reason to be proud of them. Nonetheless, the Tulls are a seriously dysfunctional family, for Cody is consumed with anger, jealousy, and suspicion; Ezra yearns for the family that never was, and Jenny is unable to maintain a stable, loving marriage. Each of them is simultaneously driven from and drawn to the natal family.
much more at:http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=5607

ps i dont remember reading this one!