Saint maybe

Anne Tyler

Book - 1991

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Tyler, Anne
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Tyler, Anne Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Knopf : Distributed by Random House c1991.
Language
English
Main Author
Anne Tyler (-)
Physical Description
337 p.
ISBN
9780449911600
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Although Tyler ( Breathing Lessons ; Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant ) is again writing about families--the way they cleave together in times of trouble and muddle through with stoic courage--her eminently satisfying new novel breaks her familiar mold, giving us ordinary, not eccentric characters who are shaped by disastrous events into quietly heroic behavior. The Bedloes are cheerful and count their blessings, even if they are far from rich and live on a slightly seedy street in Baltimore. But when 17-year-old Ian rashly informs his older brother Dan that the latter's wife was undoubtedly pregnant before their marriage, Dan commits suicide, and Ian is left with profound guilt--especially since Dan's wife dies soon after. Asking God's forgiveness, he receives spiritual guidance at the endearingly shabby Church of the Second Chance. He drops out of college, becomes a carpenter and helps his parents care for the three orphaned children; as the years pass, that burden falls primarily on Ian's shoulders. Wondering when God will signal that his atonement can end, Ian has an epiphany: ``You could never call it a penance, to have to care for those three.'' Ian eventually does construct a life for himself, in one of Tyler's most appealing endings. The narrative also enjoys her whimsical humor (although the group role of the ``foreigners'' who live in the neighborhood verges on caricature). Since her characters' foibles never overwhelm their homespun simplicity, the reader is emotionally involved and touched as never before. 250,000 first printing; BOMC main selection; first serial to the New Yorker. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The distinctive characters, the soul-shattering events, the quirky wit of Tyler's recent novels--the Pulitzer Prize-winning Breathing Lessons and The Accidental Tourist --all appear, at first, to be here. Ian Bedloe, the youngest, golden child of a happy family, causes his brother's death. Searching for relief from his guilt, he wanders into the Church of the Second Chance and finds that forgiveness can be his through atonement. So for the next 20-odd years, he devotes himself to raising the three children brother Danny and Danny's wife Lucy (who took her own life shortly after his death) left behind and to following the precepts of his church. Though his need for absolution is understandable, his plodding path toward forgiveness--of himself and of Danny and Lucy, whose deaths altered his life so irrevocably--lacks the inventiveness we have come to expect of Tyler. As Ian's mother says about halfway through the novel, ``We've had extraordinary troubles. . . and somehow they've turned us ordinary . . . . We're not a special family anymore.'' And though the characters have a palpable reality, this novel is more ``ordinary'' than Tyler's previous ones. Still, expect demand. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 5/1/91; BOMC main selection.-- Francine Fialkoff, ``Library Journal'' (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review

YA-- All is well with the Bedloe's Baltimore family until Danny, the eldest son, announces his engagement to Lucy, a woman he has known for only two weeks and who is the mother of two small children, Agatha and Thomas. Their own daughter, Daphne, is born sooner than expected that same year. The suicides of first Danny and then Lucy are unexplained, and all but destroy the Bedloe family. While only a college freshman, Ian, Danny's younger brother, returns home to raise the orphaned children and to search for his own salvation through the Church of the Second Chance. Tyler's remarkable novel pulls at the heart strings and jogs the memories of forgotten youth. Ian's story is neither action packed nor fast moving, but each page will be eagerly anticipated. While the majority of YA readers lack enough life experiences to appreciate the pure joy of Tyler's descriptions and thoughts, not to steer them in her direction would be a shame. --Katherine Fitch, Lake Braddock Secondary School, Burke, VA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Many of Tyler's principals, introverted, removed, plod around the perimeters of self like patient dray horses, so it's no surprise that her saint here--a Baltimore teen convinced that he caused not only his brother's death but the dire consequences that followed shortly after--is a deliberate and careful saint, laboring conscientiously on the narrow, plainly marked path of a fundamentalist Christian church toward expiation. One terrible night, Ian Bedloe, 19, third child of cheerful Bee and agreeable Doug (one of those Tyler men who say, ``Well, now''), blurts out to brother Danny his suspicions about Danny's wife--bright-lipsticked, tiny-faced Lucy, mother of two by a divorced husband and of an infant (by Danny?). Danny, slightly drunk, drives off into a fatal accident; months later, sad and scatty Lucy dies also--after what was probably an accidental dose of sleeping pills. Clubbed by the horror of unbearable guilt, Ian is drawn to the storefront Church of the Second Chance, presided over by Reverend Emmett, undoubtedly God's agent--bony, magisterial, discovered later to be affectionately capricious. Reverend Emmett lays out the Way: forget college, provide for and rescue aging parents from the care of Lucy's kids (ages six, three, and baby) and ``set things right.'' Ian ``saw that he was beginning from scratch...as low as he could get.'' Years pass; Ian works as a carpenter leading a life of celibacy and service; kids mature and shape up. Where is that reward? Ian is ripe for a Sign. It comes, of course--as do love and a second chance. As always, Tyler's people--from powerless small children (whose ``every waking minute was scary'') to the electric, poignant Lucy to the crackly little church group--are as intensely real and yet ultimately unknowable as those who somehow have changed one's life. Less accessible than some of Tyler's others, but on its own terms, perfection. (Book-of-the-Month Dual Selection for September.)

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.