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The Used World: A Novel by Haven Kimmel
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The Used World: A Novel (edition 2007)

by Haven Kimmel (Author)

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3631171,749 (3.84)14
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The Used World Emporium is the sprawling antique store where Hazel, Claudia, and Rebekah pass their days surrounded by dusty furniture, cast-off clothes, and ancient housewares. But with the unexpected arrival of two babiesâ??and the unfolding of not one but three love stories, each spanning generationsâ??their formerly used world becomes new again. Heartrending, hilarious, and inspiring by turn, The Used World is the book that Kimmel's loyal fans have been waiting forâ??and it is certain to win her legions of new o… (more)

Member:JeremyReppy
Title:The Used World: A Novel
Authors:Haven Kimmel (Author)
Info:Free Press (2007), 434 pages
Collections:Your library
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The Used World by Haven Kimmel

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» See also 14 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 11 (next | show all)
Couldn't follow . Story jumped all around. Leslie didn't like it either!
Listened on audio C.J. Critt ( )
  Indygirl | Aug 4, 2016 |
A beautiful book, full of weather and women. The three women who work together and whose stories inter-weave through the book are well constructed. The men are much more shadowy figures in the novel, with the exception of one vicar. Most of the novel is set in the cold of winter and you can feel the chill coming off the page, even when we move to the summer, it is not hot and sunny, but raining very, very heavily. She gets you into her characters heads and you feel everything with them; this is a warm and enchanting novel. ( )
  CarolKub | Jun 10, 2010 |
I also highly recommend Something Rising (Light and Swift) and The Solace of Leaving Early. Of the three, though, this one probably has the broadest appeal to readers not completely smitten with Kimmel's idiosyncratic style. ( )
  booksinthebelfry | Mar 23, 2010 |
If I summarize this book by saying that it’s about the interconnected lives of three women in a small town, I will be telling the exact truth, but I will also be giving you completely the wrong idea. Astrologically-minded Hazel Hunnicut owns The Used World Emporium, a giant indoor flea market in Jonah, Indiana. Her employee Claudia is middle-aged, freakishly tall (and often mistaken for a man), and terribly lonely. Rebekah is in her late twenties and has just found out she’s pregnant by the young man who just left her. All three women have to cope with demons from their past: Claudia can’t stop grieving for her dead mother, Rebekah’s father has disowned her for leaving the extremely strict religious sect in which she was raised, and Hazel has to deal with her aging hippie sister – among other things. But as the novel unfolds, all three women realize that what matters more than the past is the future they must all forge together.

This book was interesting…I’m still kind of digesting it. It has a contemplative feel, and although there’s a lot going on in terms of plot, it unfolds very slowly. I think my biggest problem with the book is that it’s so narrowly focused on this tiny cluster of women that it gets claustrophobic. There are practically no men – only two male characters of any significance, and only one of them is likeable (and he doesn’t appear that much in the book, actually). What I did like about The Used World was the writing style, which is lovely as always. There’s also a lot of religious speculation, which I find fascinating, but it’s more than that: religion really permeates the whole novel, and I think part of the reason is that Kimmel is trying to evoke the ethos of the American Midwest. In my opinion, she succeeds. I can’t say this is a novel I loved, but I definitely think it was worth reading.

Also, I actually underlined something in this book – possibly the first time I’ve ever made a mark in a novel. Here’s what struck me (it’s from the local minister’s sermon): “The Kingdom of God is a door perpetually opening, and it makes me, as dear Emerson said, ‘glad to the brink of fear.’â€
  christina_reads | Apr 22, 2009 |
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Epigraph
We come upon permanence: the rock that
abides and the word:
the city upraised like a cup in our fingers,
all hands together, the quick and the dead and the quiet.
-- Pablo Neruda, "The Heights of Macchu Picchu"

The virgins are all trimming their wicks.
--Johnny Cash, "The Man Comes Around"
Dedication
For John

I borrow these words from Martin Buber:

The abyss and the light of the world,
Time's need and the craving for eternity,
Vision, event, and poetry:
Was and is dialogue with you.
First words
Claudia Modjeski stood before a full-length mirror in the bedroom she'd inherited from her mother, pointing the gun in her right hand - a Colt .44 Single Action Army with a nickel finish and a walnut grip - at her reflected image.
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Drama. Fiction. HTML:

The Used World Emporium is the sprawling antique store where Hazel, Claudia, and Rebekah pass their days surrounded by dusty furniture, cast-off clothes, and ancient housewares. But with the unexpected arrival of two babiesâ??and the unfolding of not one but three love stories, each spanning generationsâ??their formerly used world becomes new again. Heartrending, hilarious, and inspiring by turn, The Used World is the book that Kimmel's loyal fans have been waiting forâ??and it is certain to win her legions of new o

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