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An Atomic Romance: A Novel
 
 
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An Atomic Romance: A Novel [Hardcover]

Bobbie Ann Mason (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 23, 2005
This provocative, rollicking story is the much-anticipated new novel–the first in over a decade–from acclaimed author Bobbie Ann Mason. In An Atomic Romance we meet Reed Futrell, a sexy, thoughtful hero who grapples with radioactive contamination, a midlife crisis, and string theory–all while falling in love.

Reed is an engineer at a uranium-enrichment plant near a riverside city in heartland America. He has deep roots in this community: He was raised there; his father worked at the very same plant before him. And it was here that Reed met, married, and then divorced his wife. Reed spends countless nights camping at a local wildlife preserve, gazing at the stars, fishing and hunting–that is, until deformed frogs are discovered at the site. Though his father was killed in a tragic accident at the atomic plant years ago, Reed stays on, proud to perform demanding and dangerous work for the benefit of the nation. As for the radioactive “incidents” he has endured, Reed prefers to think about other things–Hubble photographs of distant galaxies, Albert Einstein, his dog.

Reed’s casual attitude toward danger infuriates his on-again-off-again girlfriend, Julia, as much as his quirky mind and muscular body intrigue her. Julia, a biologist, is truly Reed’s match–or maybe more than his match. They both are witty, curious, and fascinated by science. Indeed, their courtship began with banter about Stephen Hawking’s theories of space-time, and ever since it has been an up-and-down adventure of sexual attraction, intellectual game-playing, and long silences when Julia refuses to return Reed’s calls.

When news reports reveal evidence of radioactive pollution in the land surrounding the plant, Reed and Julia’s relationship faces an unprecedented challenge. In An Atomic Romance, Bobbie Ann Mason delivers a brilliant novel set against a backdrop of atomic power: a love story between a motorcycle-riding loner and an independent, strong-minded biologist; between the peaceful present in a typical American community and the nation’s violent nuclear past; and, finally, between a good man and the work he takes pride in, though it may be putting his life in danger.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In her first novel in a decade, set against the backdrop of a Kentucky nuclear power plant, Mason (In Country; Shiloh and Other Stories) conjures utterly believable, ordinary characters in extraordinary circumstances to take a penetrating look at America's nuclear legacy. Reed Futrell is divorced with two grown kids and still in good shape in his 40s, after having worked for more than 20 years at the uranium enrichment plant—the town's economic backbone. Like his father, who died at the plant in a chemical accident when Reed was a boy, Reed handles dangerous repairs. When news breaks about plutonium leaks at the plant, Reed tries to downplay the risks of his job, and his co-workers fear layoffs. Meanwhile, he clashes with his girlfriend, Julia, a pathologist whose level of outrage about the plant Reed doesn't share. As he and Julia slowly come together despite their disagreements, Reed investigates further and realizes that the company he thinks is taking care of him might not be telling its workers the truth. When both the plant's crisis and the romance come to a head, Mason packs a punch with a light touch, commenting on the missteps of the past and how we have to live with them.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine

In her first novel in a decade, Mason examines the joys and sorrows of life in an atomic Heartland town. It seems, however, that a decade-long break hasn’t done Mason any favors. While a few critics called the novel wholly original, many felt it courted every cliché in the book—hackneyed romance, science versus ethics, corporate greed, etc. These themes would resound on deeper emotional and political levels if the characters or story was uniformly convincing. But Reed and Julia often come off as caricatures (though critics consistently praised Burl, Reed’s drunk "prayer warrior"), and the novel’s tone seesaws between playful and overly serious (though Mason does get the science right).

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; First Edition edition (August 23, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375507191
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375507199
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,842,990 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Glowing Novel About An Atomic Man and Radioactive Rutabagas, September 3, 2005
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This review is from: An Atomic Romance: A Novel (Hardcover)
Bobbie Ann Mason in her first novel in many moons has created a very likeable and most ordinary of heroes, one Reed Futrell who we learn in the first sentence "still went camping in the Fort Wolf Wildlife Refuge, but he no longer brought along his dog." We soon find out why this once favorite place of Reed's is now off limits to his beloved Clarence, described as a collie-shepherd combo.

Reed is in his forties and the divorced father of two "normal" adult children who have moved away from the never-named town where most of this story unfolds although it apparently is somewhere in Kentucky. He exercises daily, rides a motorcycle for pleasure, and is much attracted to a lot of women who also find him desirable, although he has recently met and fallen for an unusual woman named Julia who works at a cytopathology lab and wants to "save the world from sinister diseases like Ebola and anthrax." Reed is a second generation employee of a nuclear plant where his father died in a chemical accident when his son was only six. Reed's employment-- he was exposed to dangerous chemicals in 1986 although he has never told Julia and has not had a physical in five years-- and Julia's fear of what is actually going on at the plant and her distrust of both corporate America and the U. S. Government provide the major conflict for this beautifully crafted novel.

Ms. Mason has a great ear for the dialogue of people and customs from "around here" and gets it all down on paper with flair. One of Reed's fellow workers has a wife who says that going to a mall on weekends is spending "quality time" together. At the lounge in the hospital where his mother is recovering from a stroke, Reed meets a "wide-bodied family." (Of course Mississippi recently beat out Kentucky and the other Southern states for having the most obese citizens.) When he is home he sits on a "dog-abused" sofa. An ex-stripper whom Reed sees occasionally has a "Botox-frozen forehead." His mother, embedded in an assisted living facility called Sunnybank where she feels like a "helpless donkey in a stall," has hanging on her wall a striking bird clock-- a necessary item in the homes of people of a certain age and class-- where a different bird sings out each hour and the clock invariably strikes at the wrong times. (I once bought one for my own mother for Mother's Day.) The author also adroitly turns nouns into verbs. Reed has to be careful not to "pancake" down a canyon," and while wearing sweatpants and shower clogs "flip-flopped into the den."

Reed is so much like a lot of us, who along with many of his fellow-workers, either has a fatalistic attitude about what may be going on in the chemical plant, the "if I'm already exposed to radiation, I do not want to know about it since there's nothing I can do about it" attitude, or denying that the amount of radiation he surely has been exposed to is lethal. He is a little like the farmers in Kentucky and other southern states who for generations raised and smoked tobacco and then shuffled off to VA hospitals to die of lung disease.

Although there is much to make your laugh-- radioactive rutabagas for instance-- in this fine novel that could be called "love in the time of radiation," it ultimately makes a sad statement about corporate greed and governmental indifference to the health and safety of its citizens.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not great, March 31, 2011
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This book came recommended from a friend who had read it and a number of other books from Bobbie Ann Mason. I found the book pretty average. I didn't connect with the characters, and a lot of the talk about radiation poisoning or nuclear illness just sort of passed me by without much care. It was a quick and easy read, but I don't expect to revisit it any time soon.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AN EXPLOSIVE BOOK! Sweeping landscape. Touching love story., September 19, 2005
This review is from: An Atomic Romance: A Novel (Hardcover)
I purchased this book for two reasons: I liked the author's name. It took me back to my childhood with my sisters in Ohio: Dottie Sue, Billie Mae, and Gladdie Jo. Of course, I was Betty Lou in those days. The second reason is because the book is set in my parents' birthplace, Kentucky.

Silly reasons to buy a book, but am I ever glad I did!

This was my first introduction to this well-known author and I find her style to be endearing in every aspect. Her characters are well-drawn, sympathetic and real.

The plot is an old one: company man on the lower echelon of the pecking order, goes up against his BIG BAD company to protect the workers, and to add to the enjoyment, he finds true love along the way. What makes this book so unique is this talented author's masterful writing. I couldn't put it down.

Thanks, Ms. Mason for an enjoyable few hours.

P.S. I am a proud member of the great charitable organization, THE KENTUCKY COLONELS, an honorary order of the Governor's office.

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