Amazon.com Review
A weekend-in-the-country plot along the lines of The Cherry Orchard and The Big Chill gives this short novel its theatrical structure, and Pall's crackling wit and insightful prose give it its lively, moving voice. The Ginzburgs are your average smart, mostly successful, less than happy New York Jewish family with an acceptable level of dysfunction and a dying father who once disappeared with a suicidal poet. Gathered at Meyer Ginzburg's deathbed, the Ginzburg siblings talk, argue, reminisce, and speculate on the life their father lived apart from them, and reconstruct something like a unified family again.
From Publishers Weekly
There are no villains or heroes in this perceptive, poignant examination of family; whatever a character's surface traits-foppery and vanity, or nobility and self-sacrifice-Pall (Back East, 1983) digs deep to expose the sweetness and vulnerability that are at each one's core. On a rainy autumn weekend at their family's farmhouse in the Catskills, the five adult Ginzburg children and three of their mates gather for the first time in many years. The reason: their father, Meyer, who abandoned them and their mother 28 years ago, has returned home to die. At first shunning Meyer, who lies upstairs reflecting on his fragmented life with increasing detachment, the various Ginzburgs engage in the reminiscing, raillery, crying and feuding that are particular to siblings. Take away the wise and analytical commentary and this is a classic drawing-room drama set in a country house; the theatricality is further enhanced by the presence of famous actor Anatole, the husband of the second youngest Ginzburg. But Pall never descends to cheap theatrics and instead puts a clever and always gentle twist on scenes that in less able hands would be cliched and melodramatic. Dialogue, characterizations, setting-all ring true in this mature, gracefully realized work.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
