Pearce oysters A novel

Joselyn Takacs

Book - 2024

Pearce Oysters, a family drama set on the Louisiana coastline during the catastrophic 2010 oil spill, follows the Pearces, local oyster farmers whose business, livelihood, and industry are on the brink of collapse. This eye-opening eco-fiction explores the bonds between deeply sympathetic characters: Jordan, the reluctant head of his family's storied oyster company; May, his distressed, widowed mother; and Benny, his beatnik musician brother, who returns from New Orleans in their time of crisis. Together, the Pearce family must commit to a final act of hope in the face of impending tragedy. Will it be enough to save their legacy?

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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Takacs Joselyn (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 26, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Ecofiction
Published
New York : Zibby Books 2024
Language
English
Main Author
Joselyn Takacs (author)
Physical Description
357 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781958506509
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In 2010, third-generation Louisiana oysterman Jordan Pearce takes over the family business after his father's death. Jordan loves the hardscrabble life, but he must support his distraught mother and musician brother Benny, who lives in New Orleans and is involved with Kiki, a radical ecology protester, whom he brings to the family home the week the BP oil rig explodes. When the spill is not contained, Jordan is forced to ask his brother to help with harvesting. As the brothers struggle to understand each other, they must also deal with their mother's depression and the collapse of their business, and they put up a huge sign on their roof to protest the destruction. This draws an NPR reporter to their home to interview them about the spill, but the publicity cannot save their livelihood. This debut novel vividly explores oystermen and their culture in the face of a terrible environmental disaster. The complex characters and the lovingly described Louisiana setting bring this eco-tragedy sympathetically to life. Recommended to readers of issue-oriented fiction such as Charlotte McConaghy's Migrations (2020) and Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead (2022).

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A family of Louisiana oyster farmers deals with the aftermath of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill in Takacs's intense debut. Jordan Pearce, 34, works the oyster leases he inherited from his late father five years earlier. He sends paychecks to his younger brother, Benny, who co-owns the business but refuses to work on the boats and rarely visits, preferring to pose as a starving anarchist in New Orleans. When the offshore drilling rig Deepwater Horizon explodes and oil pours into the Gulf of Mexico, the company that contracted the rig hatches a plan to use toxic dispersants for the cleanup. Jordan pleads for Benny to return and help harvest the oysters while they still can. Benny, freshly dumped by his girlfriend after cheating on her, slinks home. As uncertainty about the future and threats to their health mount, Jordan starts dating a Native American bartender, his mother develops a worsening addiction to Xanax, and Benny, who is bisexual, begins sleeping with a Salvadoran day laborer. Though the supporting characters feel underdeveloped, Takacs captures the emotional toll of the disaster on the Pearces. It's a devastating portait of the human cost of ecological destruction. Agent: Maria Whelan, InkWell Management. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A family's livelihood is on the line in the wake of the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Jordan Pearce is a Louisiana oysterman. His father was an oysterman, and his father's father was an oysterman. It's in his blood. So when the oil from the BP spill starts threatening his oyster allotments, Jordan feels his entire world begin to crumble. First his friend and longtime deckhand Doug "Babies" Davies quits suddenly for a higher-paying job working to clean up the spill. After trying all his leads to find a replacement for Babies and quickly discovering that his friend is not the only one jumping ship to work for the oilmen, Jordan almost loses hope. Finally, at his widowed mother May's urging, Jordan reluctantly convinces his semi-estranged bohemian brother, Benny, to come in from New Orleans to work with him on the boat. Jordan and Benny begin to build back their relationship while everything else around them falls apart. News starts spreading that the dispersant used to clean up the spill is harmful to their health; the oil continues to encroach on the oysters; and the personal lives of Jordan, Benny, and May all hang in the balance. Takacs packs a lot in, taking on politics, environmentalism, addiction, family dysfunction, and love. At times the pacing is awkward, and some parts feel too rushed and overabundant, particularly toward the end. That said, Takacs tells a story that feels fresh in its point of view, all the while lending her characters a humanity that paints them neither as heroes nor as villains, but as messy, complex, and wholly worthy of the reader's time: "People could disbelieve anything, Benny thought, if it's too painful. There are no limits. He swiveled to see who was clapping for his brother--people who seemed to think Jordan was being brave. This was fear masquerading as heroism, but it was the only form of heroism available at the moment." A unique story with a wealth of compelling characters. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.