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AMERICAN CREAM

Slow and character-clogged.

Static first novel set in the same rural Pennsylvania town as Tudish’s story collection Tenney’s Landing (2005).

Her characters, though not unlikable, are far too plentiful. Matriarch Caroline Rownd keels over in the first chapter, leaving widower Nathan alone on the family farm. Their daughter Virginia returns to help out; Nathan’s injury in a tractor accident keeps Virginia and her teenaged son Randall there for the summer, but husband Rob has to remain home in suburban Maryland to work. Nathan has taken up with the objectionable Lydia Will, cook in the school cafeteria. Virginia, who used to call her Mrs. Swill, still dislikes her father’s new bride, especially when she learns that the couple plans to sell the farm and move into town. Virginia’s feelings for high-school sweetheart West Moffat are also unchanged, even though he’s married too. Now a trout farmer, West is no less attractive than when he was a teenage stud, prompting Virginia to lose her head and hit on a crazy scheme. With West’s senile grandpa along as chaperone, the pair travels to Iowa to buy a pair of gorgeous butter-colored yearlings. The horses belong to a special breed called American Cream, a favorite of Nathan’s, and Virginia hopes they will entice her father to stay on the farm. A hot affair erupts between Virginia and West; the unsettled Randall takes off with the local wayward girl desperate to locate her true father in Baltimore; and myriad other events occur—all related at a turtle’s pace while headed toward outcomes that are never in doubt.

Slow and character-clogged.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 2007

ISBN: 978-0-7432-6769-4

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2007

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IMAGINE ME GONE

As vivid and moving as the novel is, it’s not because Haslett strives to surprise but because he’s so mindful and expressive...

Awards & Accolades

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  • Pulitzer Prize Finalist

This touching chronicle of love and pain traces half a century in a family of five from the parents’ engagement in 1963 through a father’s and son’s psychological torments and a final crisis.

Something has happened to Michael in the opening pages, which are told in the voice of his brother, Alec. The next chapter is narrated by Margaret, the mother of Michael, 12, Celia, 10, and Alec, 7, and the wife of John, as they prepare for a vacation in Maine. Soon, a flashback reveals that shortly before John and Margaret were to wed, she learned of his periodic mental illness, a “sort of hibernation” in which “the mind closes down.” She marries him anyway and comes to worry about the recurrence of his hibernations—which exacerbate their constant money problems—only to witness Michael bearing the awful legacy. Each chapter is told by one of the family’s five voices, shifting the point of view on shared troubles, showing how they grow away from one another without losing touch, how they cope with the loss of John and the challenge of Michael. Haslett (Union Atlantic, 2009, etc.) shapes these characters with such sympathy, detail, and skill that reading about them is akin to living among them. The portrait of Michael stands out: a clever, winning youth who becomes a kind of scholar of contemporary music with an empathy for black history and a wretched dependence on Klonopin and many other drugs to keep his anxiety at bay, to glimpse a “world unfettered by dread.”

As vivid and moving as the novel is, it’s not because Haslett strives to surprise but because he’s so mindful and expressive of how much precious life there is in both normalcy and anguish.

Pub Date: May 3, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-316-26135-7

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Feb. 14, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2016

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HEX

Admirably bold if sometimes hard to care about.

A tale of poison and obsession set amid the toxic halls of academe.

Expelled from her graduate program in biological science after a lab-mate dies, a victim of the group's toxicological experiments, Nell Barber is left obsessed and unmoored. Though once she’d been focused on oak trees, she is now consumed by the need to finish the dead girl’s project to “neutralize botanical toxins,” to combine the poison and its antidote. Now it is Nell’s mission, working alone in the exile of her Brooklyn apartment, to build “a poison that undoes itself.” Yet it is not the work that is at the heart of her obsession but her mentor, Dr. Joan Kallas. The novel itself is a series of journal entries, all addressed to her absent beloved. “As with the old work, the new work is for you, Joan,” Nell writes. “What isn’t for you?” The rest of Nell’s world is populated with Joan-adjacent players. There is Joan’s husband, Barry, the self-important and useless Associate Director of Columbia Undergraduate Residence Halls—less a threat to Nell than a man-shaped afterthought—and Nell's two best friends, Tom and Mishti, who, as students in good standing, still have access to the privilege of Joan’s presence, both enrolled as nondepartmental students in her class. Mishti is a beautiful chemist; Tom is a beautiful medieval and Renaissance historian and also Nell’s ex-boyfriend. Soon, all six of them are intertwined, a web of sex and betrayal, with Joan (always) at the center. It is a lush and brooding novel, over-the-top in its foreboding, with Dinerstein Knight (The Sunlit Night, 2015) walking the delicate line—mostly successfully—between the Grecian and the absurd. As a string of weirdly mannered sentences, it is a joyfully deranged pleasure; as a novel, though, the experience is frustratingly hollow, populated by characters who only come to life in the book’s final third.

Admirably bold if sometimes hard to care about.

Pub Date: March 31, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-9848-7737-6

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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