Welcome Home, Stranger
A Novel
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- 22,99 €
Publisher Description
“Kate Christensen’s new novel, Welcome Home, Stranger, is a revelation, offering characters as real as your family and friends, a rich, vividly drawn setting, grab-you-by-the-throat drama and always, lurking in the shadows, a fierce authorial intelligence. What more could you ask?”—Richard Russo, author of Somebody’s Fool
“To the great literature of going home again we can now add Kate Christensen’s superb new novel Welcome Home, Stranger, a triumph of intelligence and wit (which will surprise none of her many fans). The prodigal here is a brilliant journalist grieving the loss of a very difficult mother while attempting peace with those she left behind: a resentful sister and an ex-lover who can be neither trusted nor forgotten. A spellbinding book from one of our best chroniclers of the very American struggle to strive for excellence while still living in community with others.”—Ann Packer, author of The Children’s Crusade
“A deeply endearing story about confronting one’s past and constructing a new future—under extreme duress. . . . Welcome Home, Stranger . . . arrives at the most lovely ending of a novel I’ve read all year."—Washington Post[
From the PEN-Faulkner Award-winning author of The Great Man comes a novel about grief, love, growing older, and the complications of family that is the story of a fifty-something woman who goes home—reluctantly—to Maine after the death of her mother.
Can you ever truly go home again?
An environmental journalist in Washington, DC, Rachel has shunned her New England working-class family for years. Divorced and childless in her middle age, she’s a true independent spirit with the pain and experience to prove it. Coping with challenges large and small, she thinks her life is in free fall–until she’s summoned home to deal with the aftermath of her mother’s death.
Then things really fall apart.
Surrounded by a cast of sometimes comic, sometimes heartbreakingly serious characters—an arriviste sister, an alcoholic brother-in-law and, most importantly, the love of her life recently married to the sister’s best friend–Rachel must come to terms with her past, the sorrow she has long buried, and the ghost of the mother who, for better and worse, made her the woman she is.
Lively, witty, and painfully familiar, this sophisticated and emotionally resonant novel from the author of The Great Man holds a mirror up to modern life as it considers the way some of us must carry on now.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In Christensen's penetrating latest (after The Last Cruise), a journalist returns to her hometown in Maine after the death of her estranged mother, Lucie. Rachel is a "middle-aged childless recently orphaned menopausal workaholic." Her sister, Celeste, is a mother of two, married to the scion of a wealthy family. The sisters quarrel (initially over the fact that Rachel was absent while Celeste nursed Lucie through cancer treatments and hospice care), then reconnect, then quarrel again. Lucie struggled with alcoholism and often pitted the sisters against each other. As they attempt to bring an end to their perpetual conflict, various male characters orbit them. There's Rachel's longtime lover David, now married and about to be a father; Neil, Celeste's distant husband; and Jesse, an unhoused man who reminds Rachel of her dead cousin, and whom she hires to fix up Lucie's house. The plot treads familiar ground, but Christensen skillfully portrays the issues at play in many families: there are deep bonds, but also deep resentments, "volcanic" emotions, and decades-old misunderstandings. The character Lucie, an immature, thwarted tyrant, is particularly well drawn. Readers in search of an engrossing family drama will find much to like.