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Loading... The Ice Storm (1994)by Rick Moody
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Huh? ( ) Fucking family. Feeble and forlorn and floundering and foolish and frustrating and functional and sad, sad. Fucking family. Fiend or foe. Likely Ang Lee's film remains superior. The struggle is apparent here. One trying to rationalize one's upbringing is always a fool's errand. Moody appears to halt before the warmth. He's perhaps too keen to be clinical. During the long Thanksgiving weekend in 1973, the commuter village of New Canaan, Connecticut, is the focal point for a transformative series of events that bring sexual satisfaction and frustration, emotional distress and elation, marital collapse, a heck of a big ice storm, and death. Apparently told from the various points of view of the four members of the Hood family (though in fact the real narrative voice is singular and backward looking from a distance of twenty years), the novel concentrates on what must have been foremost in all of their lives in 1973: sex. Benjamin Hood is involved in a desultory way in an extra-marital affair; his wife, Elaine, longs for something more in her marriage and in her life; their daughter, Wendy, is learning about sex with two brothers in the house next door; and Paul, who is away at prep school, is making his own plans for sexual conquest. The family is about to come apart, and from the looks of the television news with Watergate and Vietnam, it looks as though the country will too. Rick Moody catches the Hood family at the cusp. Nothing will be the same after this weekend. But will anything really change? It may be a moot point. Certainly the writing here is enough to fascinate. The period detail will enthral those readers old enough to be able to experience real nostalgia of this time period in America. And the speculations of the wider significance of ‘family’ in life and in comics will propel some readers into further thoughts on the meaning or meaninglessness of marital vows, sexual dalliance, and alcohol abuse. This is not a novel with all the answers. And it even doubts some of its own questions. But it is a novel with a lot to offer and needs to be read if only to remind us when Rick Moody found his form. Recommended. no reviews | add a review
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Two families intimately and dangerously converge in this boldly dark and tempestuous novel A potentially devastating blizzard approaches New Canaan, Connecticut, while internal forces of desire, frustration, and ennui threaten to tear apart two quintessentially affluent, suburban families. Elena Hood rightfully suspects her husband, Benjamin, is having an affair with neighbor Janey Williams, while Benjamin resents Elena and his mounting feelings of ineptitude. As the snow begins to fall, Benjamin and Elena, as well as Janey and her husband, attend a neighborhood "key party," where they and other respectable suburbanites agree to go home with whomever's keys they draw from a bowl. Meanwhile, the Hoods' and Williams's teenage children are caught up in their own experimentations with sex and drugs as they test the boundaries of their structured upbringing. With author Rick Moody's sharp eye for the nuances of suburban life and allusions to 1970s America from Watergate to the Fantastic Four, the novel's landscape is vivid and immersive. The unforgettable voices of multiple narrators ensure that, beyond a social commentary, The Ice Storm remains a compassionate portrayal of multidimensional and flawed characters seeking happiness amid familial and societal constraints. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Rick Moody including rare images from the author's personal collection. No library descriptions found. |
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