Author: Lorrie Moore
Book Details: I found this book at the Bayfield Public Library the first time I ventured out of the kids/young adult section when I was about ten. Over the next eight years, I probably checked it out twenty times, but I haven't read it again since I graduated from high school. As I read A Complicated Kindness, I was reminded of this book and I was curious to return to it and figure out why. Both authors write with an affecting humor. Both novels take place in a small town near the US-Canadian border (one on the Canadian side, one on the American side) that has a small amusement park frequented by French Canadian tourists in the summer. Both have female narrators: one a sixteen year old writing in present tense, the other a middle-aged woman on vacation with her husband in France and reflecting on being sixteen. Both are about how the place we have grown up (and the people in this place) have simultaneously pushed us away and pulled us back.
"I never knew what to do with all those years of one's life: trot around in them forever like old boots--or sever them, let them fly free? Of course, one couldn't really do either. But there was always the trying, and pretending. And then there was finally someplace in between, where one lived."
Genre: Novel
Book Details: I found this book at the Bayfield Public Library the first time I ventured out of the kids/young adult section when I was about ten. Over the next eight years, I probably checked it out twenty times, but I haven't read it again since I graduated from high school. As I read A Complicated Kindness, I was reminded of this book and I was curious to return to it and figure out why. Both authors write with an affecting humor. Both novels take place in a small town near the US-Canadian border (one on the Canadian side, one on the American side) that has a small amusement park frequented by French Canadian tourists in the summer. Both have female narrators: one a sixteen year old writing in present tense, the other a middle-aged woman on vacation with her husband in France and reflecting on being sixteen. Both are about how the place we have grown up (and the people in this place) have simultaneously pushed us away and pulled us back.
"I never knew what to do with all those years of one's life: trot around in them forever like old boots--or sever them, let them fly free? Of course, one couldn't really do either. But there was always the trying, and pretending. And then there was finally someplace in between, where one lived."
Genre: Novel
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