After The Fire, a Still Small Voice
Material type:
- 9780099535836
- F/WYL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Fiction | F/WYL |
Available
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CA00006070 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Frank and Leon are two men from different times, discovering that sometimes all you learn from your parents' mistakes is how to make different ones of your own.
Frank is trying to escape his troubled past by running away to his family's beach shack. As he struggles to make friends with his neighbors and their precocious young daughter, Sal, he discovers the community has fresh wounds of its own. A girl is missing, and when Sal too disappears, suspicion falls on Frank.
Decades earlier, Leon tries to hold together his family's cake shop as their suburban life crumbles in the aftermath of the Korean War. When war breaks out again, Leon must go from sculpting sugar figurines to killing young men as a conscript in the Vietnam War.
£7.99
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
First novelist Wyld offers the moving tale of a man's search for inner peace and escape from everything that haunts him. The interesting twist is that this is really the story of two men-father and son-fighting the same inner turmoil in different time periods. Frank leaves the city for the oceanside shack in eastern Australia once owned by his grandparents. Forever changed by his experiences in Vietnam, Leon is on a journey of his own. In an alternating narrative, the reader sees how Leon's son Frank becomes more like him and yet further apart, so that they are unable to reconcile. Leon, once an aggressive man completely taken over by the horrors he has experienced, eventually becomes a gentle Bible follower, while Frank starts out as an often-neglected boy but becomes a man who beats up his girlfriend. Verdict With mental tension, war, missing children, and the daily struggles encountered in the Australian bush, there is plenty to keep the reader engrossed. A definite page- turner that will appeal to those seeking a good escapist read.-Leann Restaino, Girard, OH (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
One of Granta's New Voices of 2008, debut novelist Wyld chronicles the stories of two Australian men and the shards of trauma that have made up both lives. Frank and Leon live parallel lives: the narratives begin with young Leon's father heading to the Korean War, and, 40 years later, with an adult Frank holing up in a decrepit beachfront shack. Leon's father returns from Korea badly damaged, having been in a prison camp, and soon runs away, with Leon's mother giving chase. Later Leon is drafted and faces in Vietnam horrors similar to those that traumatized his father. Meanwhile, in the present day, Frank is starting over after his girlfriend leaves him. Making do in the family shack, he befriends his neighbors and threads together a passable existence in spite of remembered tragedies, anger at his shadowy father and a spate of local children gone missing. The two narrative threads stay separate until the final pages, and, refreshingly, their connection isn't overplayed. At times startling, Wyld's book is ruminative and dramatic, with deep reserves of empathy colored by masculine rage and repression. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Frank's rage has driven his lover away and propelled him out of Sydney and into his grandparents' long-abandoned cabin on the wild coast. Frank is tentatively befriended by his neighbors, including their strange little girl, but mostly he broods alone by the shark-patrolled sea. Enigmatically interleaved with Frank's rueful and haunted days and nights is the story of Leon, the misfit son of European Jews who find refuge in Australia, where they run a cake shop. Leon's fragile father enlists to fight in the Korean War and returns utterly shattered. Leon takes over the shop, his parents disappear, and he is drafted and sent to Vietnam. Wyld, one of Granta's New Voices of 2008, writes with abrading intensity and potent lyricism about the stunning amorality of the natural world and the brutishness and suffering of humankind, from domestic violence to war. Ravishingly atmospheric and wisely compassionate, this somber, ambitious first novel attempts to net more sorrows, secrets, and horrors than it can hold, but there's no doubt that Wyld is a writer of immense abilities and depth.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2009 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.