The boatbuilder

Daniel Gumbiner

Book - 2018

At 28 years old, Eli "Berg" Koenigsberg has never encountered a challenge he couldn't push through, until a head injury leaves him with lingering headaches and a weakness for opiates. Berg moves to a remote Northern California town, seeking space and time to recover, but soon finds himself breaking into homes in search of pills. Addled by addiction and chronic pain, Berg meets Alejandro, a reclusive, master boatbuilder, and begins to see a path forward. Alejandro offers Berg honest labor, but more than this, he offers him a new approach to his suffering, a template for survival amid intense pain. Nurtured by his friendship with Alejandro and aided, too, by the comradeship of many in Talinas, Berg begins to return to himself. ...Written in gleaming prose, this is a story about resilience, community, and what it takes to win back your soul.

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1st Floor FICTION/Gumbiner Daniel Due May 2, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
San Francisco : McSweeney's [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Daniel Gumbiner (author)
Physical Description
237 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781944211554
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Gumbiner's first novel is a coming-of-age story that captures the disaffection of a twentysomething who feels lost in the world. Eli Berg Koenigsberg had a bright future after college until a serious concussion left him with an opiate addiction. In yet another attempt to fight it, Berg moves to a small town in Northern California but is soon breaking into homes to find his next high. While working on a charter boat, he meets Alejandro, an eccentric boatbuilder with an obsessive and inquisitive nature. Berg becomes Alejandro's apprentice and finds the job's physical labor and steep learning curve to be curatives for his addiction. Even more important, Alejandro's wisdom, work ethic, and endless curiosity show him new ways to deal with his pain. A testament to Gumbiner's fine writing, readers will easily slip into Berg's day-to-day existence; Gumbiner relays Berg's ambivalence, desperation, and anxiety without resorting to over-the-top scenarios or dialogue. He allows his characters and small-town setting to shine in this beautiful novel about finding one's place, no matter how small, in the world.--Sexton, Kathy Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An opioid addict-turned-apprentice boat builder tries to find himself on the Northern California coast.We meet 27-year-old "digital refugee" Eli "Berg" Koenigsberg at a low point in his life: After a concussion led to an opioid addiction, then rehab, he has moved to Talinas, a town on the Northern California coast, where he hopes to establish "a sober life"instead he's breaking into houses for drugs. But within pages, Berg cleans himself upat least a little. He gets a job, manages to wean himself temporarily off pills, and then apprentices himself to Alejandro Vega, a boat builder who tells him things like "stop thinking about the result. Stop wanting [the work] to be over right away and I promise everything will go better." Alejandro is "a genius," his mind "borderless and kinetic," and under his influence Berg learns not just to work with wood, but to "get outside of himself." But will Alejandro's healing influence be enough to combat the lurking urges of addiction? Gumbiner's debut is an underachieving redemption tale, and its failures are familiar to that particular genus of didactic literaturenamely: The difficulties from which the characters need redeeming feel like excuses for the author to show us how exactly redemption can be had. Gumbiner could have sidestepped this with detail, by diving deeply into his human subjectsbut his novel, like its characters, aspires toward simplicity rather than complexity. The result is that everythingthe problem, the solutions, the quirky Northern California vibe, even the potentially fascinating fact that Berg robbed Alejandro's house before later becoming his apprenticefeels like a plot device, and thus unconvincing, one-dimensional, bland. There is the occasional arresting line; for example, the skin on an addict's face looks like it has been "stretched tight and then stapled across his jawline." But the book is mostly composed of apathetic sentences (a supporting character's storytelling is "disjointed and difficult to follow, like an avant-garde novel"), vapid dialogue (" What's up, Berg?' Hi Kennethdo you remember my girlfriend, Nell?' Hi,' Nell said. Oh hi," Kenneth said"), and clichd profundity ("the problem was he didn't know what he wanted").An unfortunately bland sketch of addiction, millennial listlessness, and the redemptive quality of craftsmanship with some Northern California flare. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.