Maine
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Trois générations de femmes de la famille Kelleher se retrouvent dans la maison familiale du Maine, pour un dernier été. Ces vacances bouleverseront leur existence.
" Un récit passionnant écit sans la moindre fausse note." Harlan Coben.
DU pur plaisir épicé d'une piquante intelligence
"L'un des bons romans de l'été" Grazia.
Maine fonctionne comme un manège de fête foraine, efficace, implacable." Le monde.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sullivan follows debut Commencement with a summer spritzer that's equal parts family drama, white wine, and Hail Marys. The story follows the struggles of three generations of Kelleher women: drunken Alice, the mass-going matriarch; her rebel daughter, Kathleen, a Sonoma County farmer; Kathleen's sister-in-law, the dollhouse aficionado Ann Marie; and Kathleen's daughter, Maggie, an aspiring writer. Rather than allowing the characters to grow or the plot to thicken, the novel's conflict derives almost entirely from the airing (or not) of various grievances (Alice believes herself responsible for her sister's death; Maggie is pregnant, single, and terrified; Kathleen is still the bitter person she was before she sobered up; Ann Marie has a martyr complex). The Kelleher summer home on the Maine coast is the putative center around which the drama revolves, yet it is the women's common love for Daniel, the patriarch rendered faultless in death, who does the most to bring the women together. The book's tension is watered down at best, like a sun-warmed cocktail: mildly effective, but disappointing. When conflict finally does break the surface, the exhilaration is visceral but short-lived. Late in the story, Kathleen tells Maggie, "It's going to be okay," to which she responds, "It has to be." Unfortunately, the reader never gets much chance to worry otherwise.