If the ice had held

Wendy J. Fox

eBook - 2019

Melanie Henderson's life is a lie. The scandal of her birth and the identity of her true parents is kept from her family's small, conservative Colorado town. Not even she knows the truth: that her birth mother was just 14 and unmarried to her father, a local boy who drowned when he tried to take a shortcut across an icy river. Thirty-five years later, in Denver, Melanie dabbles in affairs with married men while clinging to a corporate job that gives her life order even as her tenuous relationships fall apart. She still hasn't learned that the woman who raised her is actually her aunt-or that her birth mother visits her almost every day. This fiercely guarded secret bonds the two most important women in her life, who hatched a... plan to trade places and give Melanie a life unmarred by shame. Yet, as a forest fire rages through the Rocky Mountains and a car accident shakes the family, Melanie finds herself at the center of an unraveling tangle of tragedy and heartbreak. If the Ice Had Held speaks with a natural lyricism, and presents a cast of characters who quietly struggle through complicated lives.

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Subjects
Published
[United States] : Santa Fe Writer's Project 2019.
Language
English
Corporate Author
hoopla digital
Main Author
Wendy J. Fox (author)
Corporate Author
hoopla digital (-)
Online Access
Instantly available on hoopla.
Cover image
Physical Description
1 online resource
Format
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
ISBN
9781939650924
Access
AVAILABLE FOR USE ONLY BY IOWA CITY AND RESIDENTS OF THE CONTRACTING GOVERNMENTS OF JOHNSON COUNTY, UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, HILLS, AND LONE TREE (IA).
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When Sammy drowns after falling through the ice, he leaves behind a pregnant 14-year-old girlfriend, Irene. His sister Kathleen decides to take Irene under her wing, even raising the child, Melanie, as her own, and never telling Melanie the truth about her parentage. Grown up and working for a soulless tech company in Denver, Melanie lives alone and makes a habit of sleeping with married men. One of these men, Brian, is discontented with his suburban life with wife, Jenny, and their two kids; after their one-time encounter in a hotel room in Chicago, his and Melanie's lives converge again in an unexpected way. Cycling through several other points of view and several different time lines, from 1974 to 2017, Fox's (The Pull of It, 2016) low-key story explores the fragility of life and the ways people find to accommodate and survive. Families are fractured by divorce or death, but family and home still lie at the heart of the idea of what life should be.--Mary Ellen Quinn Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

One hasty decision sets in motion decades of consequences for interconnected families in Colorado.The ice didn't hold, in 1974, on the night Sammy Henderson took a shortcut home. If it had, he would have kept his promise to 14-year-old Irene, pregnant with his babythat he would marry her and she would finish school. Instead, Sammy drowned in the frozen river, which forced both Irene and Sammy's sister, Kathleen, to switch tracks and arrange an alternate future for the baby, Melanie. Fox (The Pull of It, 2016, etc.) pushes her story out from this central cluster of events like cracks spreading on a sheet of ice. Using seven voices to narrate their separate but overlapping experiences across the years, from 1974 to 2007, she builds up a vista of linked histories and emotional journeys. Marriages often split up, children are frequently raised by a single parent, and infidelities regularly occur. Grown-up Melanie has a job in Denver and a string of casual, married lovers. One of them, Brian, the son of the policeman who found Sammy's body, is married to Jenny, who has met Melanie through work. These and other charactersMelanie's stepfather, Jenny's motheradd other facets, yet loneliness, departure, and a quest for some kind of fulfillment drive almost all of them. The men are generally more faithless than the women; the value of leaving or being left is debated. One touchstone is the reliably joyful friendship that endures between Kathleen and Irene, which warms and embraces Melanie, too. Fox delivers finely observed, lyrical, detached storytelling, persuasive in its depiction of everyday unions and choices, although her decision to interconnect some characters in a late, jarring encounter seems a coincidence too far. Yet this is eloquent tale-spinning lit by unshowy portraiture.A small (too small?) world, but a perceptible talent. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.