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Loading... Mohawkby Richard Russo
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. 3574. Mohawk, by Richard Russo (read May 1, 2002) I read this because I rather liked Russo's Pulitzer-prize-winning Empire Falls, so I thought I would read his first book, laid in a town in the Albany, N.Y., area. For a time the story held my interest, but then it got weirder and weirder and by the last chapters I no longer cared what happened to any of the characters. After I finished I noted a blurb on the book's jacket from John Irving--which should have I suppose warned me away from the book, since the one book of Irving's I've read left me with no desire to read a second of his. ( )The rough draft for nobodies fool. Great read. (#17 in the 2004 Book Challenge) Okay so we're having a bit of a Richard Russo-fest in our household. This is, I think, his first novel and it's very decent although not spectacular. Life in a small town in New York State. The ending is a little too ... um, trying too hard to be highly dramatic yet profound, or something ... but overall it's not bad. Grade: B+ Recommended: to people who liked Empire Falls, also to fans of Michael Chabon (I think they have a similar voice, or at the very least, a voice with similar appeal). I really like Richard Russo, but this book disappointed a little. It seems that this first novel is an early draft of Empire Falls. The story was darker, and a bit confusing in parts. The wrap-up in the final chapters seemed a bit forced. Straight Man is still my favorite. -- Jim McKeown no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0394744098, Paperback)The town of Mohawk may be provincial but it's far from sleepy. Its inhabitants seem perpetually awake, and not only on Saturday at two in the morning, "when the bars are closing and people are forced to consider the prospect of returning home with so many of the night's dreams unfulfilled." Richard Russo focuses on several characters who are leading lives of extreme--and extremely funny--longing. Dallas Younger, for instance, hit his peak playing high-school football, and it's been downhill from there. He has no idea what women, particularly his ex-wife, are thinking, which makes him really glad there are none in on the local poker game. And he's still at a loss to figure out why he has no relationship with his son (probably something to do with the fact that he never sees him). Even the calendar at the local grill is for 1966, since the owner figures "the months are the same" and being a few days out of whack doesn't matter. This same man has a private betting system. Choosing among the top jockeys isn't that hard--he tries to assess their current levels of pride, concentration, and desire. Richard Russo shows us that these same qualities exist in his hard-luck characters.(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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