Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts

Sunday, October 8, 2023

Go As a River

Read, Shelley. Go As a River. New York: Spiegel & Grau 2023. Print.




First Sentences:

He wasn't much to look at. Not at first, anyway.



Description:

It's an intriguing title to Shelley Read's debut novel: Go As a River. In this compelling story of a young woman's life in the tiny town of Iola, Colorado in the late 1940's and beyond, this phrase pops up to describe a way to survive and continue living:
I had tried...to go as a river, but it had taken me a long while to understand what that meant. Flowing forward against obstacle was not my whole story. For, like the river, I had also gathered along the way all the tiny pieces connecting me to everything else, and doing this had delivered me here, with two fists of forest soil in my palms and a heart still learning to be unafraid of itself.
Victoria Nash, a seventeen-year-old girl, lives with her father, uncle, and younger brother on their generational peach ranch, serving the men in her family and helping with the crops after the deaths of her mother, aunt, and older brother in a auto accident five years earlier. She has no dreams of another life or the world outside her home and nearby woods until a young stranger drifts through town...and she is smitten.
God will bring two strangers together on the corner of North Laura and Main and lead them toward love. God won't make it easy. 
The consequences of her love for this outsider drive the remainder of the story as she leaves her home and family to be with this young man. But soon the reality of life in that era intrudes on the couple's world and both young people and their lives are forever changed.
 
That's all I will reveal of the compelling plot. But please know this is a very special tale of choices, survival, love, and family as seen through the narrator's (Victoria's) eyes and senses. She is passionate about her family and the natural world that surrounds her, and works to nurture and preserve both by whatever means available to her strength and determination. Her voice is true and strong, whether describing her surroundings or contemplating her doubts and obstacles she faces in her present and future life.
The old house smelled like only old houses do, like stories, like decades of buttery skillet breakfasts and black coffee and dripping faucets, like family and life and aging wood.
This is completely Victoria's story, although other major characters are depicted with skill and honesty by author Read. It is a dreamy book in some ways, but always under laid with the reality of the challenging world surrounding this young girl and her later adult years.

I was completely caught up in Victoria and her world, her intense will to survive as well as her heartfelt doubts about whichever road she decides to take. read's prose is simple and clear as the orchard and woods Victoria inhabits, exactly setting the tone on both innocence and gritty determination.
He would teach me how true a life emptied of all but its essentials could feel and that, when you got down to it, not much mattered outside the determination to go on living. 
Happy reading. 
____________________

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Doig, Ivan. The Whistling Season  
A young, mysterious woman takes on work as housekeeper to a man and his sons on a small Montana farm. Along with her brother, she ingratiates herself into the family and community with long-reaching affects. Narrated by one of the young sons, it is a highly descriptive, delightful story of the people and events in a rural town. Absolutely one of the best books I have ever read. Highest recommendation.  (previously reviewed here)

 

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Our Souls at Night

Haruf, Kent. Our Souls at Night. New York: Borzoi. 2015. Print.



First Sentences:
And then there was the day when Addie Moore made a call on Louis Waters. 
It was an evening in May just before full dark.













Description:

Sometimes a first sentences perfectly set the mood for the story ahead. Quiet, confidential, smoothly flowing like a friend confiding in you another tale fondly remembered. You are immediately drawn in to the narrator's simple words, settling in to listen to a tale being spun just for you from the memory of a friend.

Kent Haruf is just such a friend and gentle storyteller. His latest (and sadly his last as he died in 2014),  Our Souls at Night continues his tales about the everyday people living in the tiny town of Holt, Colorado. 

In the opening pages, Addie Moore bring a modest proposal to her neighbor Louis Waters.
I wonder if you would consider coming to my house sometimes to sleep with me...we're both alone. We've been by ourselves for too long. For years, I'm lonely. I think you might be to. I wonder if you would come and sleep in the night with me. And talk.
Both are senior citizens, widowed, with grown families. They agree to spend nights together in bed to talk and combat the loneliest hours of their single lives. No sex is involved, just gentle conversation, getting to know each other, and enjoying some companionship. Louis arrives at Addie's house each evening and leaves early in the morning. Their lives continue as usual except for this nightly arrangement. And that's the whole story. But in the hands of a writer like Haruf, it is enough to keep any reader engrossed.

The people in their small town soon get wind of this situation, of course, and make judgments, some derogatory and some envious. Addie and Louis' families express shock at their behavior, reactions that affect their new relationship and that of Addie's young grandson who is temporarily living with her.

This is a quiet tale of real people with honest thoughts and reflective natures. They deal with this new situation with curiosity, hope, and grace while slowly recounting their lives to each other, their successes and failures, and their dreams. The reactions of other townspeople leave them indifferent, deciding that at their age they can do whatever they like without worrying about the opinions of others. As Louis sums up in his goals for living:
I just want to live simply and pay attention to what's happening each day. And come sleep with you at night.
Highly recommended for a great read, a story of kindness, compassion, grace, and some real sadness in the lives of two quality people.


Happy reading. 



Fred

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Haruf, Kent. Plainsong

Two crusty bachelor farmers in the tiny town of Holt, Colorado, find a pregnant teenager on their doorstep and take her in, completely changing the lives of all three forever. A fine, gentle, honest book that should be read by everyone.