The Hummingbirds
A Novel
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Ezra works as a live-in groundskeeper on a celebrity couple’s enormous rental property in Los Angeles. When the magnetic Sybil sets her sights on Ezra and gradually lures him in, he is as conflicted as he is tempted. Then Grant, her husband, approaches Ezra with a different proposal—to monitor Sybil to see if she is having an affair—and he is faced with the formidable challenge in refusing one or the other. And so begins this sexy, mesmerizing novel about Sybil, an actress desperately hoping for the important role that will resurrect her faltering career; Grant, a cunning, self-made movie producer infamous for subterfuge and secrets; and Ezra, the beautiful, troubled young man they employ—a man haunted by the memory and teachings of his mother, the leader of a new-age cult that deifies birds. Over one life-altering week, Sybil casts Ezra as the center of her universe. Together, they fantasize about the new life for both of them, where Sybil directs and stars in an controversial film about the Middle East, and Ezra can finally realize his dream of traveling to photograph exotic birds, a craft he has cultivated in the hummingbird-filled gardens of the property. But when Sybil’s husband Grant discovers their passionate affair, the three are set on a collision course that can only end in violence.In The Hummingbirds, Ross McMeekin captures people yearning for deep connections in a shallow world defined by the twin obsessions of power and beauty. It is a story of love and redemption, of murder and betrayal, and of the darkness that lurks in the heart of Hollywood.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the prologue of McMeekin's lackluster debut, groundskeeper Ezra Fog is pistol-whipped by an unidentified man and dumped into the Pacific. Flash back nine days. Ezra is employed by influential Hollywood actor Sybil Harper and her producer husband, Grant Hudson. Ezra's work routine allows him the freedom to nurture his fascination with hummingbirds, and he spends as much time as possible trying to catch their beauty on film. His comfortable, quiet existence is rocked when Sybil, whose eyes are not "the massive, prepubescent globes of so many other actors, but bright blue shiners carefully guarded by her lids," starts to come on to him. Ezra is overcome by desire for her, and their interactions become more complex after Grant offers him money to take pictures of the license plates of the cars of any men who visit his wife while he's not at home. Despite a backstory involving Ezra's troubled mother, who believed that the apocalypse was imminent, he and the other characters come across as two-dimensional. McMeekin adds nothing new to familiar noir tropes.