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Loading... Strange but True: A Novel (P.S.) (original 2004; edition 2005)by John Searles
Work InformationStrange but True by John Searles (2004)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A great read. Searles never disappoints. This is a story of suspense but infused with wit and mystery. The cast of characters is this novel are so well written and so interesting. Philip must confront his past along with his mother and this journey is filled with many ups and downs. When Ronnie's high school girl friend shows up and drops her bombshell, I was sucked in. I couldn't put this one down. Brief Description: Philip Chase has moved back home with his mother Charlene after suffering a fall from his New York apartment. Charlene, who never really recovered from the death of her youngest son Ronnie five years earlier, has turned into a bitter overeater—filled with anger at Ronnie’s death and her divorce from her husband Richard (who is now remarried). When Ronnie’s old girlfriend, Melissa Moody, shows up unexpectedly and tells Philip and Charlene that she is pregnant and she thinks Ronnie is the father, it sets into motion a series of events that take us into the past and into a rather strange and unexpected present. My Thoughts: I didn’t really expect much from this book (which I picked up for the Take A Chance challenge) and was pleasantly surprised to find it to be an engrossing and affecting read that surprised me midway with a major U-turn that was unexpected but thrilling. I know the plot might sound a bit weird/paranormalish, but the book is fully grounded in reality and deals more with lost souls and desperate, lonely people than with the paranormal. As I got to know Philip, Charlene and Melissa, I wanted all of them to find the happy ending that they deserved. I was surprised how much I got involved in their stories, and Searles does a wonderful job of developing these characters so that they feel real and lived-in. And, as I mentioned, the book takes a rather strange turn in the middle, which I found both shocking but oddly pleasing in its weirdness. If you’re looking for a different read that will both surprise you and affect you emotionally, try this book. It was an unexpected delight. no reviews | add a review
Now a Major Motion Picture starring Amy Ryan, Greg Kinnear, and Blythe Danner. "Sinister and complex.... You'll race right through it."--New York Times After a mysterious fall from his New York City apartment, Philip Chase has moved back home with his mother, Charlene, a bitter woman who has never fully accepted the death of her younger son, Ronnie, five years earlier. Surrounded by memories of the family he no longer has, and trying to forget the reasons he left New York, Philip is in stasis. But everything changes late one windy February night when Ronnie's high school girlfriend shows up on their doorstep. A sad young woman who still bears the scars of the accident that took Ronnie's life, Melissa is nine months pregnant. The father, she claims, is Ronnie. Now Philip and his mother must confront not only Melissa's past but also their own: the secrets each has buried and the lies each has told. But not everyone wants the past exposed.... At once a moving story of redemption and a heart-stopping work of suspense, Strange but True "will hold you transfixed" (Salon.com). No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Ronnie leaves behind a community, a school, his grieving parents, his brother, and Melissa, a girl friend who, five years after the accident, is pregnant and claiming through divine intervention, Ronnie is the father.
While the plot is twisted, it is easy to follow. Ronnie's parents are divorced. His surgeon father remarried and moved to Florida. Ronnie's mother cannot help but be incredibly, darkly bitter.
Ronnie's brother is the narrator of the story, and we follow him as he leaves Radnor, PA and moves to New York City in the hope of writing a best seller book of poetry.
Melissa finds a run down cottage owned by a husband and wife who look after her. The husband become just a bit too friendly. There are three cottages. The husband and wife who own the properties live in one cottage, the other is rented to Melissa and the third, unbeknownst to others, contains the bodies of some of the husband's targets/
He previously belonged to the Radnor, PA police force, but because of a scandal regarding a young woman who claims he physically exploited her, he is asked to leave his job.. In support of him, his wife Gail who worked at the police station, leaves as well.
Various characters are in states of grief or denial. The ending is very suspenseful.
I've read three other of John Searle's books, all of which are excellent.
Four Stars