The House on Salt Hay Road

by Carin Clevidence

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A fireworks factory explodes in a quiet seaside town. In the house on Salt Hay Road, Clay Poole is thrilled by the hole it's blown in everyday life. His older sister, Nancy, is more interested in the striking stranger who appears, dusted with ashes, in the explosion's aftermath. The Pooles--taken in as orphans by their mother's family--can't yet know how the bonds of their makeshift household will be tested and frayed. As their aunt searches for signs from God and their uncle begins an show more offbeat courtship, they are pulled toward two greater cataclysms: the legendary hurricane of 1938 and the encroaching war. show less

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7 reviews
As described, this novel starts off with a bang, and it ends with a bit of flourish, but in the middle it drags. It's a sleepy, sad little novel, which captures a time and place very well.

Perhaps it reflects on me, more than on the author, that I had a hard time staying focused. Initially, I picked it up right after finishing [b:Before I Go To Sleep: A Novel|10323019|Before I Go To Sleep A Novel|S.J. Watson|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41lntvtXziL._SL75_.jpg|14625976], which is the opposite of a sleepy little period novel. In comparison, I just couldn't get into it, so I set it aside for a while. When I returned to it one book later, I was able to stand the pacing better, but it was still awfully slow.

Overall, the characters show more were well developed and the prose was well written.

I received this novel through the first reads program.
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Eh. Well-written, but the storyline just drifted along aimlessly, and I couldn't get interested in any of the characters.
Carin Clevidence's debut novel THE HOUSE ON SALT HAY ROAD focuses on a patchwork family—young Clayton and his older sister Nancy, their aunt Mavis and uncle Roy, and grandfather Scudder—who live together in the town of Fire Neck on Long Island. The book traverses the seasons from 1937 to 1938, leading up to a 1938 hurricane that killed 50 people.

Orphaned brother-sister pair Clayton and Nancy Poole have spent the past few years of their lives in "the house on Salt Hay Road," a cottage belonging to their grandfather Scudder. Nancy is tired of the small-town atmosphere of Fire Neck and has plans to make her own way in the world as a big-city typist, but Clayton grows ever more attached to the town as he begins assisting a pair of show more clammers and putting away money to buy his own boat. He looks up to his uncle Roy (despite Roy's aversion to boats and the ocean) and his grandfather Scudder, who used to risk his life out on the sea with a Coast Guard-like rescue organization. They and Aunt Mavis, a nervous and superstitious woman whose bad marriage left her with a habit of getting up to bake in the middle of the night, have been surrogate parents to Clayton and Nancy. The family is disappointed in Nancy's hasty decision to marry an exciting stranger from Boston, Robert Landgraf, and move away with him.

All does not go well in Nancy's marriage, however, as she comes to realize that her husband is a stranger to her and she feels alienated from her family. Meanwhile, Mavis is haunted by her missing husband's financial obligations, while Roy struggles to make Clayton understand why he hates the sea and never married (the loss of the woman he wanted to marry caused him to attempt suicide in the bay). When Scudder becomes ill, his strength and lucidity fading fast, Nancy hurries back to Fire Neck and remains there separated from her husband, while Clayton continues to feel alienated from the sister who abandoned him. As the family struggles with relationships gone sour, a hurricane blows in from the sea and sweeps away one of their number.

THE HOUSE ON SALT HAY ROAD is a testament to the author's skill at simple but evocative imagery. She paints a detailed portrait of a Long Island beach town in the 1930s and writes with a keen eye for effective metaphors and similes. But the characters don't seem vivid and fleshed-out enough; although Mavis with her superstitions and tics was an interesting presence in the story, the other characters felt generic and bland, and I never quite felt emotionally connected with them and their struggles. The prose has its moments of blandness as well; though the imagery is effective and well-used, the narrative jumps too quickly from point of view to point of view to allow the reader to establish a connection with any particular character and suffers from an over-abundance of exposition. Fire Neck sounds lovely, but the journey through the characters' lives there was unsatisfying.
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Eh. Well-written, but the storyline just drifted along aimlessly, and I couldn't get interested in any of the characters.
THE HOUSE ON SALT HAY ROAD
Carin Clevidence, Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2010, $25.00/C$18.50,HC, 304pp, 978-0-374-17314-2.

Clayton and his sister Nancy lost both parents and have moved in with their mother’s family on Salt Hay Road on Long Island. In the Spring of 1937 a firework factory explosion rocks the community as the story opens and you soon get a sense of the family dynamics. Nancy takes on the role of mother to Clayton causing some resentment on his part. She never quite accepts her circumstances or the love of her Aunt, Uncle, grandfather. When Nancy meets Robert, a visitor from Boston, she is swept away by his charm and with impulsivity agrees to marry him. Nancy assumes that Clayton will move with her, but when he refuses show more she is forced to leave her only family and move to Boston.

After her departure, Grandfather Scudder, is filled with sorrow and his health deteriorates as he grieves her absence. Aunt Mavis questions her own marriage left abandoned by her husband. Uncle Roy, never married becomes interested in a newcomer to the island. Clay finds a job and avoids school whenever possible. Nancy feels isolated and unhappy. When the hurricane of 1938 slams the eastern seaboard, all are caught off guard. This is not a story about this devastating hurricane, but more about the choices made, consequences, and ultimate forgiveness.

The first half sets the tone and the rhythm of daily life for the Poole family. The setting is vivid and charming as anyone who lives or visits the shore will embrace. Each character touches you with compassionate familiarity. Readers may find the pace at the beginning slow, however, the second half is much more engaging as the family struggles through the hurricane and its aftermath. The House on Salt Hay Road is a pensive and memorable achievement with a timeless message.


© [Wisteria Leigh] and [Bookworm's Dinner], [2008-2011].
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This book compress nearly a century of Brookhaven hamlet, NY events into a few pre WWII years. But gives a good flavor of life in the hamlet well into the late 20th century.
I thought The House on Salt Hay Road was excellent. Most definitely worth a read.
½

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The House on Salt Hay Road
People/Characters
Clay Poole; Nancy Poole
Important places
Fire Island, New York, USA; Suffolk County, New York, USA; New York, USA; USA

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3603 .L497 .H68Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
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72
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Reviews
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(3.20)
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English, French
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Paper, Ebook
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7
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2