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Loading... The Exiles: A Novel (2013)by Allison Lynn
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Starting over. Generally, it has a positive connotation. You have the chance to try something new, to conquer something else, to improve upon past successes, to do something you’ve always wanted to do. But sometimes starting over is a defeat, the result of failure and it carries all of the baggage and unhappiness and negativity that defeat and failure would imply. In Allison Lynn’s new novel, The Exiles, her characters are starting over after failing but their fresh start is compounded by the secrets they’ve kept, their separate disappointments, and their dwindling resources. Nate has traded his Wall Street investment banking career, never much to boast about, for a stable if unglamorous financial job in Newport, Rhode Island. He, girlfriend Emily, a former advertising wiz, and their 10 month old son Trevor leave the rich and ostentatious community in Manhattan into which they never quite fit. As many of their belongings as possible are packed into Nate’s prized Jeep Cherokee and they head to Newport on a long holiday weekend, exhausted and disappointed but ready to take possession of their new house and start over. But while they are closing on the house and receiving the keys from their realtor, the Jeep, loaded with the essentials to keep them going until the moving van arrives, including all of their financial information, is stolen. Now all they have for the long weekend is one empty house, the clothes on their backs, Trevor’s stroller, the diaper bag, and $84. What they also have are their unspoken concerns and enormous secrets they need to share with each other but which they are finding it hard to acknowledge, knowing that the other will feel the revelation of the secrets to be a violation of honesty, trust, and their relationship. As they separately contemplate the hidden truths that need to come out, they ruminate about their pasts, growing up, their charmed meeting, and their early life together before they were forced to slink away from Manhattan in ignominious defeat. Nate’s father was a famous architect but Nate’s childhood was one largely bereft of his father’s presence or of paternal love. His younger brother and his mother, both long gone, were his bedrock. What he did internalize of his father’s life lessons was to flaunt his skills, always guard his reputation, and to avoid embarrassment. He’s not certain he’s lived up to these injunctions and fears that the only thing he’s inherited from his long estranged father is the Huntington’s disease that killed his grandfather as he obsessively checks and rechecks his health. Emily’s childhood was quite different from Nate’s. As the child of a struggling single mother, she has always striven for more rather than less financial security, something she has not found with Nate. Their friends in New York were phenomenally wealthy and Emily always noted the disparity between their life, their possessions, and hers and Nate’s. Jealousy is not a pretty emotion. As she struggles with their exile from the City, she must also compare the loss of their Jeep and its contents to the loss of an incredibly expensive painting by a famous author and casually owned by some of the aforementioned affluent New York friends and which is the subject of much speculation and gossip amongst their group, having disappeared after one of the last parties that Emily and Nate attended before they left for Rhode Island. Lynn has done a wonderful job capturing the tension, unhappiness, and preoccupation between Nate and Emily as they embark on this new chapter in their lives. The new chapter doesn’t have the smoothest of starts and the whole hardship of it, coupled with the revelation of their secrets could make or break their relationship but it will not leave them unchanged. Told over the short span of the holiday weekend before the banks open again to allow them access to money other than what they find in their wallets and pockets, the emotional line of the novel moves almost imperceptibly from a simmer to a rolling boil. The inclusion of their childhoods allows the reader to understand the effect of their early years on their decision making as adults and helps to explain, if not excuse, some otherwise inexplicable decisions. As characters, Nate and Emily are fully rounded and quite believable in their weary, downtrodden state. Their acceptance of the Jeep’s loss, aside from a brief panic, highlights the emotional toll their exile from New York has taken on them. Their lives have a claustrophobic feel to them, perhaps because of the ways in which they remain closed off from each other, sunk in their own unshared worries for the future. While they may not be the most sympathetic characters ever, they are fighting for each other, their family, and a contentment that has eluded them thus far and that very fight makes the novel an appealing read. This is a complex and nuanced look at the realities of money, or lack thereof, for even the middle class, dreams for the future (often contingent on money), the strain of keeping up appearances, secrets and their impact on relationships, the ways in which we are so truly shaped by our previous experiences, and the ways we attempt to create a new, worthy life. ...“Comfortable,” however, is not a word that readily applies to Nate and Emily’s current situation. They’ve just arrived in Newport, Rhode Island after a day on the road from New York City with a fully-packed Jeep and their ten-month-old baby boy. Parenthood has forced them to recognize that they can’t keep up with the New York lifestyle any more, and Nate’s new job is offering them the chance to exile themselves to a fresh start. But when their car is stolen during the short time it takes to meet with their real-estate agent and get the keys to their new home, on the eve of a holiday weekend, that new start faces a serious setback. And while they’ve lost all the possessions they brought with them, the couple still has some baggage. MORE: http://www.3rsblog.com/2013/07/tlc-book-tour-exiles-by-allison-lynn.html no reviews | add a review
A couple escaping the opulent lifestyle of Manhattan's Upper East Side move to Newport, Rhode Island, only to be confronted by the trappings of the life they tried to leave behind. Nate, a midlevel wall streeter, and his longtime girlfriend Emily are effectively evicted from New York City when they find they can no longer afford their apartment. An out presents itself in the form of a job offer for Nate in Newport--complete with a bucolic, small, and comparatively affordable new house. Eager to start fresh, they flee city life with their worldly goods packed tightly in their Jeep Cherokee. Yet within minutes of arriving in Rhode Island, the car and their belongings are stolen, and they're left with nothing but the keys to an empty house and their bawling ten-month-old son. Over the three-day weekend that follows, as Emily and Nate watch their meager pile of cash dwindle and tensions increase, the secrets they kept from each other in the city emerge, threatening to destroy their hope for a shared future. A story about losing it all, the complexities of family histories, tainted gene pools, art theft, architecture, and the mad grab for the American Dream, The Exiles bravely explores the weight of our pasts--and whether or not it's truly possible to start over. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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