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NIGHT ROAD

A flawed but never dull drama.

A disadvantaged teen finds friendship, acceptance and love with a prosperous Seattle-area family, until a tragic accident changes everything.

Alexa (Lexi) Baill, daughter of a heroin addict, has bounced around the foster-care system for years. A long-lost great aunt, Eva, a Walmart employee, offers Lexi a home in her trailer across the bridge from Pine Island (Hannah’s fictional stand-in for Bainbridge Island) near Seattle. At Pine Island High School, Mia, daughter of Jude and Miles Farraday, and twin sister of Zachary, considers herself an outcast. She bonds instantly with the equally alienated Lexi. Soon, the Farraday’s opulent Pine Island residence is Lexi’s second home. As senior year approaches, Lexi and Zach fall in love and are relieved that Mia approves. Jude, whose days are a pleasant whirl of caring for her elaborate garden and being a supermom, has a strained relationship with her own mother. As seniors, Zach, Mia and Lexi can’t avoid Pine Island’s teen party scene. One foggy night, Zach and Mia get falling-down drunk, and Lexi, less inebriated, urges Zach to let her drive his Mustang home. (The question of who actually drove is left vague, which dodges several moral bullets, to the story’s detriment.) On a hairpin curve, the Mustang spins out and crashes. Mia is thrown from the backseat and killed. Zach and Lexi sustain milder injuries, but Lexi’s blood-alcohol level was above the legal limit, and she accepts the blame for killing Mia. Jude turns against her implacably. Lexi, unwilling to burden Eva with the expense of a trial, pleads guilty to vehicular homicide and serves over five years in prison. While incarcerated, she gives birth to Zach’s child, Grace, and relinquishes her to the Farradays. Grace bears such an uncanny resemblance to Mia that Jude finds it almost impossible to warm to her. Released from prison, Lexi returns to Pine Island, only to find that her daughter is as isolated and distrustful as any foster child. 

A flawed but never dull drama.

Pub Date: March 29, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-312-36442-7

Page Count: 400

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: April 4, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2011

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MEN AND DOGS

Sunny outlook with enough clouds to keep it interesting.

The collapse of her marriage, not to mention a three-story fall, sends a woman back home to Charleston, S.C., to investigate her father’s disappearance, in Crouch’s sardonic second (Girls in Trucks, 2008).

Hannah, 35, and her now-estranged husband Jon are sudden San Francisco millionaires—their online sex-toy business has taken off. Her drinking and infidelity have driven Jon away. Hannah suffered her most intractable emotional wound 24 years before, the day her father Buzz, a successful doctor, motored out alone into Charleston harbor, accompanied only by the family dog, Tucker. He never showed up for his son Palmer’s soccer game that afternoon. His boat was found, containing only Tucker. Buzz’s body was never recovered. His beautiful wife, Daisy, moved on and married DeWitt, Charleston’s wealthiest man. Hannah has always compared her looks—she resembles her father, whose features look too big on her—unfavorably to her mother’s. After drunkenly scaling Jon’s apartment building to prove her love, and losing her footing thanks to a yapping terrier, she wakes up in the hospital. Jon and Daisy give her a choice: recuperation in Charleston, or rehab. Rooting among old photos in DeWitt’s mansion, she discovers some unsettling clues. One snapshot shows Daisy and Buzz at a party with a group of stoned, hippie-like friends. Hovering in the background is DeWitt. But Daisy claimed not to have met DeWitt until after Buzz vanished. Palmer, a veterinarian, is quarreling with his boyfriend Tom over whether they want a child—as if gay life in Charleston wasn’t challenging enough. In his mind, Palmer obsessively revisits his father’s last day—was Buzz driven to suicide after accidentally spotting Palmer in flagrante with another boy? Only Hannah still thinks Buzz may be alive. But if he is, why did he abandon her? Although it’s believable, one senses Hannah’s quest for Buzz is merely a pretext—self-knowledge and redefinition of family are the real goals here.

Sunny outlook with enough clouds to keep it interesting.

Pub Date: April 12, 2010

ISBN: 978-0-316-00213-4

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Jan. 18, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2010

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STRANGERS AT THE FEAST

Excessive back story overshadows forward momentum in a compassionate though schematic portrait of middle-class characters in...

Viewed through the familiar lens of a chaotic Thanksgiving Day reunion, a family’s history of disappointment and struggle is brought violently up-to-date.

Spanning three generations and a mix of ethnicities and incomes, Vanderbes’ second novel (Easter Island, 2003) reaches for social and historical breadth as it assesses individual efforts to make meaning out of life and lineage. Hosting the turkey dinner is Ginny Olson, the unmarried, 35-year-old academic of the family who has given up on relationships and recently, impulsively, adopted a mute Indian child. Her brother Douglas, who has just lost a fortune in the construction business, arrives with his no-nonsense wife Denise and three children. Also in attendance are Ginny’s parents, Eleanor and Gavin, whose marriage is another story of shame and failure: Gavin was a gilded youth whose service in Vietnam blighted his career and personality while Eleanor has acted as a steadfast, unquestioning homemaker. Ginny’s unreliable stove forces the family to decamp to Douglas’s house, unaware that a couple of poor teens have broken in. Despite tragic-comic moments, the mood is melancholic as Vanderbes sensitively surveys static careers, unhappy wives and fearful adults pressured by stressful times and expectations, culminating in an explosive blast of what-goes-around-comes-around dark irony.

Excessive back story overshadows forward momentum in a compassionate though schematic portrait of middle-class characters in crisis.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-1-4391-6695-6

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: June 3, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2010

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