Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

After the Floods by Bruce Henricksen
Loading...

After the Floods

by Bruce Henricksen

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
2415234,015 (3.85)5

All member reviews

Showing 15 of 15
This book was very well written and certainly a unique concept, however, I found it difficult to read. It did not flow and I sometimes had trouble telling whether characters were animals, birds, or people. I rated it a three due to interesting writing style and originality - it was certainly like nothing I have read before. II just wish it were a bit more contiguous. ( )
  MissReadsTooMuch | Jul 27, 2009 |
This was a strange but semi-enjoyable book. Lots of talking animals (haven't experienced that since Pynchon's Mason & Dixon) and confusing time twists. This book was like Tom Robbins goes to Lake Wobegon. ( )
  Doondeck | Jul 20, 2009 |
I found this book interesting and delightful. The eclectic characters were fascinating - even the talking animals. And even though the story seemed to jump around a bit, it still remained centered. The writing was excellent and I look forward to reading more by this author. ( )
  lakecitylib | Jul 14, 2009 |
AFTER THE FLOODS struck me as both whimsical and deep; I guess it kept me off-balance. I'm not a fan of magic realism, so it took me awhile to get into this story, which seems to contrast "good" and "evil" in several ways. The gifts of birds and time-warping in Cold Beak appealed to the childish side of my personality, while my adult side recognized their symbolism. My final analysis is that this was a thought-provoking book requiring serious study. ( )
  Animo | Feb 10, 2009 |
After the Floods takes place shortly after Hurricane Katrina, after the flood waters had mostly receded from New Orleans leaving the living to cobble together their destroyed lives. The flood has not only left destruction in its wake, but a weird twist of the world where birds and dogs are able to talk.

The opening pages are narrated (literally) from a crow’s eye view as Ruby and George Corvus survey the damaged neighborhoods. The novel veers away from New Orleans eventually, and takes the reader to Cold Beak, Minnesota - a fictional town which has also found itself recovering from a flood. It is here in Minnesota where the majority of the story takes place - revealing the odd and eccentric characters who reside in this small town. Two brothers open a restaurant, an obese woman becomes famous with her striptease act meant to educate and motivate people about weight loss, a bizarre family cult acts out violently, and birds from all over the world flock to the area. In a matter of three weeks a decade’s worth of time is compressed and the town grows economically and spiritually. After the Floods gathers together a wide array of characters who pass in and out of each others lives, seeking recovery alongside a river which nourishes them and reminds them of their vulnerability.

In Henricksen’s fictional world, magic is allowed to become reality while various characters (including an omniscient ex-mayor and a young man who questions God through a series of emails) provide insight into such things as religion, social justice, war and death.

Henricksen’s writing is at turns sad, humorous and meditative. If there is a weakness in his prose it is that he never fully develops each character before moving on to the next. I will admit that magical realism is not the genre I typcially read and enjoy - so it is to Henricksen’s credit that I felt engaged in the novel from the start. After the Floods is comedic and spiritual, hopeful and despairing - it does not offer answers, but instead frames questions about life, death, faith and how our lives interconnect with others.

Readers who enjoy well-written magical realism will undoubtedly love this novel. Charming and memorable, it will make you look at the world around you just a little bit differently. ( )
  writestuff | Jan 18, 2009 |
Of the dozen or so Librarything Early Reviewer books I have received, this is the first I would have been pleased to have found, bought and read on my own. A series of connected short stories, really, this book begins at post-Katrina New Orleans and works its way to Cold Beak, Minnesota. The stories are quirky, sad, funny, charming, and there is an element of earth magic with animals that can think and talk (for now) ever since the floods, and a town where a decade's worth of time, energy and motion have become compressed into a season. The characters are original, some are quite affecting, and the writing has an effortless grace that is layered with frequent lovely phrasings that make me go back and read the passage to savor the pleasure of it. Some of it reminds me of Garisson Keillor's stories, except that this guy's a better writer. ( )
1 vote burnit99 | Jan 14, 2009 |
After the Floods can be read on at least a couple levels. On one level, it’s an engaging story about some folks living their lives after floods in their hometowns, in New Orleans and in the fictional small town of Cold Beak, Minnesota. It is told from several points of view, including an omniscient narrator who can hear crows and dogs talk; an ex-Mayor and town historian of Cold Beak; and one of the main characters, Billy Boichild, whose narration is in the form of emails to God and Sister Ann, a religious radio personality. The first time I read it, I was aware that the narrations wove in and out of each other, that scenes in one narration were also mentioned in scenes from another narration. In the ex-mayor’s narrative, a crow drops a rose on a grave. In the omniscient storyteller’s narrative, we see the crow dropping the rose and we understand why she does this. It was fun to notice the times the scenes converged among the narratives.

I also noticed that there was another intriguing level to the novel. The theme of religion, or belief, is laced throughout the stories. Billy Boichild brings with him some peculiar beliefs to Cold Beak from New Orleans that he keeps to himself (except in his emails to God and Sister Ann), there is a nefarious cult outside of Cold Beak that plays a role in the novel, and another main character is atheist.

The novel itself is classified as magical realism. Time goes nuts in Cold Beak, birds from all parts of the world show up in Minnesota, and the crows and dogs can talk, but their voices are only heard in the narration of the omniscient storyteller. It’s made clear that the animals’ abilities to speak only appeared after the flood in New Orleans, and that it was only a temporary ability.

I have never lived through a flood or other major disaster, nor have I had the kinds of losses that characters in this novel have endured. I imagine that one of the ways people get through profound losses is by using magical thinking, whether consciously or not. After the Floods illustrates this magical thinking in an enchanting story. It’s a story to be read several times to uncover the layers. ( )
  jnavia | Jan 4, 2009 |
After the Floods is the story of two towns and the experience of recovery after a flood. The story begins in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The picture the author paints of post-Katrina New Orleans is bleak, with people eking out a life among the wreckage and dogs and crows who can talk and who reap the benefits of the dead surrounding them.

The story moves to the fictional town of Cold Beak, MN, which is recovering from its own flood. In contrast to New Orleans, however, the town is transformed for the better by the post-flood activities, largely due to the influence of Birdie May, a local large woman who decides she will perform a stage show at the new local restaurant and lounge. As the new restaurant/lounge is being built, time speeds up. Before the townspeople realize it, the sleepy little town of Cold Beak has become revitalized, with new people and new businesses sprouting up everywhere.

An overall enjoyable read, I felt that the New Orleans parts were almost superfluous to the main story of Cold Beak. I also wanted more character development. ( )
  elleseven | Jan 3, 2009 |
I've been unsure of how to review this book. On the one hand, I am aware on an objective level that this is very good writing. The prose is really first-rate; every word seems to have been deliberately chosen, and chosen well. In places, the narrator has an engaging and unique voice. I feel like I should really love this book. However, on the other hand, I didn't feel engaged; I didn't particularly like or dislike any character, and I was never very curious about what happens next. Reading this book was more like looking at pictures in a museum than the interactive, emotional experience that I usually look for and enjoy in a book. For me, the best books manage to combine these two, and in my opinion After the Floods did a fantastic job with the former, but fell down on the latter. I felt that the narrative or point of view switched around too often for me to build any real connection with anyone, and I was indifferent to the characters' fate. For this reason, After the Floods was not my particular cup of tea. However, readers who are looking for a well written book with an intriguing premise, but are not as concerned with the interactive elements of a story that I place high value on, should absolutely not miss After the Floods.
  legxleg | Jan 1, 2009 |
The catastrophe known around the world simply as "Katrina" has inspired a number of novels since it destroyed New Orleans and much of the Gulf Coast in August 2005. And novelists, because of their wonderful ability to create believable characters and subplots, probably have done as much to explain what it was really like in New Orleans after the storm as the rest of the media combined.

Now Bruce Henricksen's debut novel, "After the Floods," offers a much different, but no less perceptive, slant on what it is like to survive one of those life-changing events that none of us really expect to witness for ourselves. Henricksen's story, set on both ends of the Mississippi River (New Orleans and the fictional Cold Beak, Minnesota), is a magical one that includes talking dogs, talking crows, a little boy wise way beyond his years, a magical distortion of time itself, and a whole cast of eccentric characters doing quite well for themselves, thank you.

"After the Floods" begins in New Orleans some months after Katrina and immediately introduces the reader to two of its main characters, Ruby and George Corvus, a pair of crows that, like other of God's creatures, have suddenly been gifted with the power of speech. Things are not going very well in New Orleans, but Ruby and George are making the best of things as they observe the comings and goings below them.

Meanwhile, in Cold Beak, Minnesota, where a flood of its own did its best to destroy the little town, folks like Birdella May Borguson are getting on with their own lives. Birdie, a very large woman, decides that its time to lose weight and she convinces the owners of Cold Beak's fancy new supper club to let her perform as a stripper in the room adjacent to the dining area figuring that the exercise will burn lots of calories. Fully-functioning businesses appear on previously vacant lots almost overnight much to the fascination and delight of Cold Beak citizens. Birds by the thousand, some seldom if ever seen before in Cold Beak, descend on the town. And some from New Orleans find their way to Cold Beak, including my two favorite characters, Ruby and George.

"After the Floods" is magical realism at its best, telling its story through other eyes, through the eyes of those who live a different reality than the one we ourselves live. In our world, animals don't talk and buildings don't sprout from vacant lots. In Cold Beak, they do, and they are accepted as elements of the reality of life there.

Bruce Henricksen offers the reader a charming little world that offers hope to us all, hope that it is possible to recover from even the worst of disasters, that life goes on in new ways and in new combinations that might be as good, or even better, than what has been lost. This is not escapist fantasy; it is a serious novel cloaked in the very magic of life itself, a book with a positive message that will have you smiling much of the way.

Rated at: 5.0 ( )
1 vote SamSattler | Jan 1, 2009 |
This book starts in New Orleans after Katrina, where we learn that dogs and crows can now carry on conversations. It later moves to Cold Beak, Minnesota, where a rather large woman has started to strip to lose weight. The book has several sections, with each section following different characters (including crows and dogs). All characters have been affected by either Katrina or the floods in Minnesota. It is a quick read, but to me, there wasn't much plot to dig into.l ( )
  chgstrom | Dec 24, 2008 |
What a treasure is this book !
I received this novel as part of the early review program at LibraryThing.com. My first impression was how beautiful the cover of the book was. I was then struck by the inscription. Mr. Henricksen took the time to check out where his book was going and then to sign my copy. What a nice surprise.
I started reading the book the same evening I received it.....I finished the novel about 24 hrs later. I was immediately drawn into the story. Mr Henrickesn has a wonderful way with the written world, the prose was, in places, beyond beautiful.
I've read the other reviews and the story line has been explained. For me, this is a hard story to pin down. Sometimes I felt like I was reading a beautiful fairy tale, sometimes the story was so profound as to leave me a bit breathless but always the author kept me involved with his characters.
As I read, it was always very evident that this story was in the hands of someone possessing a good sense of humor, a sense of wonder as to the world around us and a good dose of respect for the natural world. The combination led to hours of reading pleasure......I did not want to come to the end of this novel.

A beautiful book . I will recommend this to ALL three of my reading groups. This book almost begs for sharing and discussion.

I will be waiting for more from Bruce Henricksen. I realize this is a small press and the author was responsible for the publication of this novel......Thank Goodness, I say, that it is still possible to do this. I would not want to have missed his effort. To Mr. Henricksen I say, keep up the effort. Anyone reading After The Floods can not help but be touched by the story, the style and the message.
Thank you Bruce Henricksen ! ( )
  faceinbook | Dec 14, 2008 |
This is an absolutely terrific novel. It gives us a rich variety of characters, all in recovery mode. I cried in one chapter and laughed until I cried in the next. One of the sites where the drama of healing is staged is the fictional town of Cold Beak, situated on the New Hope River. Fans of Lake Wobegon and readers of Garrison Keillor's new novel, Pontoon [[ASIN:0670063568 Pontoon: A Novel of Lake Wobegon]], are sure to take a special delight in Cold Beak. In this town, and eslewhere in the book, magial events underline the theme of upheaval in the natural order. This theme is also reflected in the novel's somewhat deconstructed plot, a plot that makes a couple of large geographical leaps and plays some entertaining games with time itself. Nonetheless, it is all easy to follow and a joy to read. Moreover, there are moments of rare lyrical beauty. This book is five stars all the way.
  viki2 | Nov 1, 2008 |
Here is a link to a review in the New Orleans Times-Picayune.
http://blog.nola.com/susanlarson/2008... ( )
  BHenricksen | Nov 1, 2008 |
The blurb on the rear cover describes this unusual novel as "magical realism -- southern style and northern style." Although I'm not too familiar with that genre (I'm mainly drawn to history, memoirs and realistic fiction), I ventured into After The Floods during my daily commute to and from downtown Detroit everyday this past Winter/Spring. The weather was ordinarily cold and dry, or cold and wet; the predominant color, grey; and the exterior of the bus, smeared with salt and dirt. The city was suffering economically and mired in a corruption scandal. Very real, and not very magical.

After The Floods was an escape in one sense, to places (New Orleans after the flood, and Cold Beak, Minnesota, also after a flood) where some animals mysteriously speak, where an obese Birdella May Borguson becomes a local hero as she strips at an otherwise humble restaurant to lose weight, where time is sometimes suspended, and where a whole host of real and unusual people live, love and survive. I loved the characters, and believed in their world, as strange and irrational as it is often portrayed by Henricksen. In that sense, the book is a worthwhile escape. If that's what you look for in a novel, then go for it.

But in another sense, the book made me look around the bus, so to speak, and wonder about some of the strangers on the bus (who really aren't strangers, because I see most of them off and on all the time). And despite the struggles around, this book reminded me to notice the magic. Maybe my time on the bus everyday is a real-life suspension of time.

After The Flood is interesting. And add to that, Henricksen's wonderful way with words and keen sense of observation, and you end up with a great read. Here's a small sampling of his prose: "Happiness never comes alone, it always drags a shadow."

"A voice told me that truth and meaning are wanderers, living here and there, sometimes in a church, sometimes in a book, a river, or a person. And as soon as you're sure you know where they are, they're gone and you have become a wanderer too."

"On warm evenings the ice rink at the recreational complex was a meeting place. Birdie, given her pregnancy and her inexperience with skates, stayed indoors sipping coffee, but many of the others I've told you about glided around the oval plane of ice under blue lights as music drifted from the speakers. Few things are more beautiful than snowflakes illuminated by lights beneath the vast darkness, snowflakes descending on children who duck and dodge among adults, forever losing and finding one another as they call 'Marco' and 'Polo.'"

I'm lucky enough to live in a place where I still get to skate at night "beneath the vast darkness" and experience a bit of Henricksen's magical realism right around me. The cicadas are hissing outside as I type, marking another seventeen year cycle of summers. I suspect that most readers will come away with similar connections to this story, and it will evoke long-set-aside memories. If this is magical realism, then I like it. It now has has a distinct place in my library. ( )
  jengstrom | Oct 25, 2008 |
Showing 15 of 15

LibraryThing Author

Bruce Henricksen is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

profile page | author page

Quick Links

Ebooks Audio Swap
0/2

Popular covers

LibraryThing Early Reviewers Alumn

After the Floods by Bruce Henricksen was made available through LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Sign up to possibly get pre-publication copies of books.

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 46,075,943 books!