The Infinite Plan
A Novel
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
In The Infinite Plan, critically acclaimed, bestselling author Isabel Allende weaves a vivid and engrossing tale of one man's search for love and his struggle to come to terms with a childhood of poverty and neglect. It is the story of Gregory Reeves and his hard journey from L.A.'s Hispanic barrio to the killing fields of Vietnam to the frenetic world of a San Francisco lawyer. Along the way, he loses himself in an illusory and wrongheaded quest, and only by circling back to his roots can he find what he is missing and what he wants more than anything in life.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
It might seem like an unwieldy task for a book to encompass a character’s entire life—unless it’s from an author as capable as Isabel Allende. The son of a traveling preacher, young Greg Reeves believes there’s a grand design that guides our lives with purpose. But as the brutal years go by, Greg endures so much pain, frustration, and chaos that he comes to believe in nothing at all. Much like she did with A Long Petal of the Sea and The House of the Spirits, Allende crafts Greg’s story over the course of decades, zeroing in on key moments and experiences with a keen eye for detail in even the most harrowing sections. From the visceral trauma of serving in Vietnam to the misguided ambition that leads him into doomed marriages and hollow career pursuits, we feel the fast-changing cultural zeitgeist batter and carry Greg in the same rough waters that shaped his entire generation. In some ways, Greg seems like a figurehead for the late 20th century as a whole. But his story is so incredibly intimate, sometimes it felt like our own.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A richly embroidered, ambitious tale, Allende's latest novel charts one man's spiritual progress against five decades of history and cultural change. Allende relies less on her customary magical realism (The House of the Spirits ) than on concrete, often graphic details in her first attempt to depict North American characters and settings. Greg Reeves, the son of an itinerant preacher who claims that life is governed by an infinite plan, spends the latter part of his childhood in the L.A. barrio where his family settled when their father became ill. His best friend and soul mate there is Carmen Morales, the daughter of a hospitable Latino family. The novel follows Greg and, to a lesser extent, Carmen through turbulent experiences as each searches for identity. Greg discovers several different kinds of racial discrimination in the crowded barrio; later, he taps into the social and sexual revolution in Berkeley; and he suffers through the crucible of Vietnam, from which he emerges determined to become rich and powerful no matter the cost in morality or peace of mind. He enters into disastrous marriages with two beautiful women, both of whom, he belatedly realizes, resemble his passive, remote mother; he also fails as a father. Allende's intensely imagined prose has clarity and dimension; she describes the exotic and the mundane with equal skill. The rambling, diffuse narrative nicely mirrors the random quality of life itself: Greg discovers that ``there is no infinite plan, just the strife of living.'' In portraying Greg as all too human and fallible, however, Allende risks making him an unsympathetic character. By the time he gains insight into the emotional factors that govern his personality (``at last I felt in control of my destiny . . . the most important thing was to search for my soul . . .''), readers may have tired of his self-destructive behavior. 100,000 first printing; $125,000 ad/promo; BOMC alternate ; author tour.