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Loading... American Boy (2011)by Larry Watson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I got this out accidentally. There is another book of the same title that deals with Edgar Allen Poe. I decided to read it anyway and am glad I did. Realistic portrayal of the choices people make and the many different forces leading to them. Interesting. ( ) Set in rural Minnesota during the early 1960s, American Boy is by author Larry Watson, whose wonderful writing elevates this coming-of-age story. Matthew Garth lost his own father and his waitress mother is always busy working to support them. He has become an unofficial part of his best friend, Johnny’s family and been taken under the wing by Johnny’s father, Doctor Dunbar. In turn Matthew has put Dr. Dunbar on a pedestal. When Louisa Lindahl is shot by her boyfriend, Dr. Dunbar treats her and she is encouraged to stay on at the Dunbar’s, working in the doctor’s office and living with the family. Matt develops an infatuation for Louisa, but she has different plans which when they are exposed lead to explosive changes for Matt as he finally sees his hero, the doctor, is oh so human after all. American Boy is a story of sexual tension, family loyalty and betrayal narrated in an insightful and reflective manner as Matt looks back at these events from his adult perspective. The author allows his story to build slowly and inserts equal parts of charm and melancholy to the narrative. While American Boy is not my favorite of Watson’s novels, it is nonetheless a very good read. “I was seventeen years old when I first saw a woman’s bare breasts, in itself an unremarkable occurrence. But when you consider that I also saw my first bullet wound on that same body, you have a set of circumstances truly rare.” That body, and the woman it belongs to become the center of the world for young Matthew Garth, and the focus of this tale. A tale about how a boy tries so hard to become a man. And how heroes rarely stay heroic. And how “There are destructive forces at loose in the world, from which neither buildings nor families can be saved.” A very well written tale!
With his graceful writing style, well-drawn characters, and subtly moving plot, Watson masterfully portrays the dark side of small-town America. Highly readable and enthusiastically recommended. AwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML:The author of the acclaimed Montana 1948 "spins charm and melancholy" in this novel of youth and romantic rivalry in 1960s rural Minnesota (Denver Post). Willow Falls, Minnesota, 1962. The shooting of a young woman on Thanksgiving Day sets off a chain of unsettling events in the life of seventeen-year-old Matthew Garth. A close friend of the prosperous Dunbar family, Matthew is present in Dr. Dunbar's home office when the victim is brought in. The sight of Louisa Lindahl—beautiful and mortally wounded—makes an indelible impression on the young man. Fueled by his feverish desire for this mysterious woman and a deep longing for the comfort and affluence that appears to surround the Dunbars, Matthew finds himself drawn into a vortex of greed, manipulation, and ultimately betrayal. Larry Watson's tale heart-breaking tale "resonates with language as clear and images as crisp as the spare, flat prairie of its Minnesota setting" (Kirkus). An Esquire Best Book of 2011. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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