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49 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
She was always misunderstood,
By
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This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
"Easter Parade" follows sisters, Emily and Sarah Grimes, over forty years. They enter adulthood during WWII, and their lives follow tremendously different trajectories. Sarah is the traditional one: she marries early, has three children, and settles into a seemingly idyllic life in the countryside. Emily is more independent, and she experiences a series of unsatisfying intimate relationships and drifts through life. The novel chiefly concerns the relationship, or lack thereof, between the sisters and their family. The story climaxes in the 1960's with mild invocations of the women's liberation movement, and Yates draws clear parallels between the sisters and their times. Although the time period is specific, the characters remain amazingly relatable and universal. The most exceptional aspect of Yates's writing is the effortlessness with which he encapsulates life: "The Easter Parade" is a relatively short novel - yet it's remarkably complete due to Yates's talent in creating scenes that so clearly recapitulate a particular period in the sisters' lives. Yates is best-known for his brilliant debut, "Revolutionary Road." His subsequent novels have received considerably less acclaim - an untenable situation considering the quality and exquisiteness of his writing. With "The Easter Parade" the story is simple but heart-breaking; the characters are unforgettable; the final epiphany is indisputable. Most highly recommended.
45 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Less Is More,
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
Having recently finished Revolutionary Road (and loving every page of it), I picked up The Easter Parade. People have told me that it was a better book than Rev Road, to which I thought: "How could it possibly surpass it?"It does, and does so without much fanfare. EP is a quieter book than RR, and initially that quietness let me down. It was missing RR's raw energy, that relentless, menacing, racing-to-a-head-on-collision-at-90-mph feeling, maybe because so much time passes in this thin novel -- a good forty years. But as I got to the last page and ruminated on Emily Grimes' and her family's tragic lives, I realized that EP is the better book because it doesn't do anything too spectacular (the ending of RR could be seen as a bit melodramatic, especially after EP). After finishing it, I flipped through the pages again and again, admiring these heartbreaking passages strewn throughout. I was amazed at how much time does indeed pass in about two hundred pages, and yet not for a second did I feel like I was getting a Reader's Digest version of Emily's life. Yates marvelously intersperses perfect quick scenes in between summarizations, never making it boring. Unlike RR, EP doesn't have any cartoonish supporting characters. Everyone in this book is real. Their pain is real, especially Emily's. You will learn to care for her, even when she's doing something horrifyingly stupid or cruel, or perhaps because of it. Her faults are our own; they belong to all of us.
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A neglected talent,
By Geoff Schumacher (Las Vegas, Nevada United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
My God, how did Richard Yates fall between the cracks? This is an excellent novel, a compelling story told with seamless, word-perfect writing. Yet, as an avid reader of contemporary literature for at least 15 years now, I had not heard of Yates until very recently. After relishing "The Easter Parade," I intend to hunt down all of Yates' books. Which is not a simple task, since he's mostly out of print and hard to find even in the better used bookstores. "The Easter Parade" excels in at least two ways. First, it is extremely well written. Yates is not a flashy writer. His sentences are grammatically perfect and tightly crafted. There are no wasted or throwaway words. He stays out of the way of the story, which can be the hardest thing for a writer to do. Second, Yates crafts believable characters who live realistic, plausible lives. This could be a recipe for boring, but Yates deftly keeps the narrative moving at a brisk pace, covering about 45 years in 225 pages. Here's hoping for a Richard Yates revival, akin to the recent resurgence of interest in Charles Portis.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Yates at the top of his form,
By Tom Daniels (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
This is firat rate Richard Yates. He passed through his own time little noticed. He was not political or experimental enough for the sixties. Yet here is Easter Parade back in print, and Yates is more relevant today than the "relevant" writers of those days. Yates' characters tend to be members of the WW II generation. They are not heros. They are not rich. They are not particularly gifted. Yates' characters are flawed, fragile people. Not overly sensitive, just fragile and flawed. In their flaws we see ourselves. Yates writes of these people with an honesty, fairness and humor that rises above the simple stories he tells. While every Yates story is on one level a tragedy, the journey is always enjoyable and illuminating. This is one you can read over and over again. Yates is not about how the "system" grinds us down. He is about how we grind ourselves down, every day, with our self-deception and our ridiculous dreams. His vision is real, true and liberating. If we could just stop being ourselves, this whole thing might go much better.
26 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
scathing,
By
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
This is the mystery of Richard Yates: how did a writer so well-respected? even loved? by his peers,a writer capable of moving his readers so deeply, fall for all intents out of print, and so quickly? How is it possible that an author whose work defined the lostness of the Age of Anxiety as deftly as Fitzgeralds did that of the Jazz Age, an author who influenced American literary icons like Raymond Carver and Andre Dubus, among others, an author so forthright and plainspoken in his prose and choice of characters, can now be found only by special order or in the dusty, floor-level end of the fiction section in secondhand stores? And how come no one knows this? How come no one does anything about it? -Stewart O'Nan, The Lost World of Richard Yates (Boston Review) Well, as it turns out, O'Nan did do something about. His essay, and similar proselytizing by Richard In one of the most depressing opening lines you'd ever want to read, Yates let's the reader know Neither of the Grimes sisters would have a happy life, and looking back it always seemed that the The promise of the 60s was that the abandonment of traditional morality, family structures, traditions, Younger sister Emily becomes little more than a slattern, scrumping in parks and waking with The troubles of both can be traced directly to the divorce of their parents. When Emily finds out that It's a marriage. If you want to stay married you learn to put up with things. Emily's prototypical affair is with Ted Banks : ...both felt an urge to drink too much when they were together, as if they didn't want to touch each The one sister is so desperate to hold her marriage together that she'll endure anything. The other is The story is, in fact, soaked in alcohol. And it becomes clear that people use drink to avoid their real Towards the end of the novel, after Sarah has apparently, though not officially, been killed by her 'You know something? I've always admired you, Aunt Emmy. My mother used to say "Emmy's a The walls of Emily's throat closed up. When she felt it was safe to speak she said 'Did she really Of course she's proud, an older sister pronouncing that she'd realized the dream of their generation, to The book is exactly as depressing as it sounds like it would be, though there is much dark humor in GRADE : A
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Neglected Masterpiece,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
Often dismissed as "bleak" by those who like uplift in their reading, this novel is a deft, perfectly paced, and compassionate masterpiece about the way people unwittingly ruin their lives. It is too funny, too perceptive, to be anything less than readable, despite its alleged "bleakness"--for which its brilliant and under-appreciated author was made to pay and pay and pay throughout his career. One recognizes oneself in these characters, and therein lies a lesson on how to avoid the mistakes (above all, the failure to love) that lead the Grimes sisters to their tragicomically inevitable end. If there's any justice in the literary world--a faint hope--someday this book will win the respect it deserves.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the other book by Yates that everyone should read.,
By
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
The Easter Parade is almost as good as Revolutionary Road. It is almost as grim as RR, but there is a ray of hope at the end. I highly recommend this book and I would urge everyone to read everything by Yates that they can get they can get their hands on. I would also recomend that the reader go to Stewart O'Nan.com and read his essay "The Lost World of Richard Yates."
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The story of two sisters,
By
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
"Neither of the Grimes sisters would have a happy life ..."
With that opening sentence, Yates sums up the entire story and then spends the rest of the novel showing us why the Grimes sisters were unhappy, and also spares the reader any false hopes of a "happily ever after" tale. The story of two sisters and their diverging paths in life is not an idea that was unique to Yates; fairy tales, Victorian novels, and twentieth-century soap operas (most notably "Love of Life" and the soap opera parody, "Soap") utilize this device. Often one sister would be the "good" one (virtuous, dedicated, mother) and the other would be the "bad" one (promiscuous, single, needy) but Yates is too smart to go for the conventional. "Easter Parade" inverts this cliche and shows how the "good" and "bad" lives are not always as they seem. Sure, Sarah gets married and has children, but at what cost? Emily is a single woman on her own in the big city at the wrong time, but does the reader really think her life is as hopeless as Sarah's? I sure didn't. "Easter Parade" truly belongs to Emily. We see flashes of a feminist consciousness in the essays she writes I spent the entire novel thinking had Emily been around a few decades later, she may have appreciated her unfettered existence much more and landed not in this novel but in Marilyn French's "The Women's Room". This novel is a good, and very fast read, and while I didn't enjoy it quite as much as "Revolutionary Road", it made me ponder its message much more than I did over "Road". I'd give "Road" an A+ and "Parade" an A-.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Minimal Realism at its Best!,
By
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
Here we have a less known great author whose every word, every sentence, is packed with meaning and art. Mr. Yates must be the Flaubert of 20th Century writers in his near perfectly written and readable books. This one has about everything.The two sisters of the divorced parents grow up under this cloud of parental dissolution, but by late adolescence seem on their way to happiness and security. The older marries of the British "Boy Next Door" (Actually upstairs), the younger is awarded a full scholarship to Barnard, no mean feat. With excursions throughout the NYC area,including a visit to the father's newspaper building, the village,etc. we slowly see how these lives deteriorate into a bad marriage, and too many sad relationships. Maybe a bit gloomy, but not without its humor, including a very odd women's group, this is a very breezy and easy read, with more insights than you can usually find in a much longer family saga.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Tragedy and Resurrection,
By
This review is from: The Easter Parade: A Novel (Paperback)
I agree with Orrin Judd's excellent review found elsewhere on this page, but there are a few more things I would like to say about Richard Yates' "The Easter Parade." In his fine biography, A Tragic Honesty: The Life and Work of Richard Yates, Blake Bailey writes that if you believe in family, or people can learn from their mistakes then this novel isn't for you. That's an exaggeration, but Yates' book is a dark dissection of the disintegration many American families went through in the mid-20th century. The Grimes sisters have nothing to cling to because no one, especially not their family, has given them a way to figure out their lives. As Yates writes in his other classic, Revolutionary Road, the people who knew how to live apparently weren't sharing that information. The concision and power of this novel remind me of Saul Bellow's Seize the Day (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics), another book about how one can utterly fail at one's life. Throughout the novel Emily Grimes' mantra is "I see" but of course she sees nothing, and drifts in and out of relationships with hideously inappropriate men. Although one of them, Jack Flanders (who is a washed-up poet) is a scathing self-portrait by Yates. Emily Grimes is, in one sense "one of the first women's libbers" as her nephew Peter puts it (because of her stubbornly defended single life) but she pays a terrible price for her solitude.
You can marvel at just how much Yates packs into a short 229 pages of elegantly written prose. "The Easter Parade" is a kind of social history of America from the 1940's to the 1970's as reflected in the unhappy lives of two sisters. It's also homage to Yates' beloved F. Scott Fitzgerald. In a way it resembles The Crack-Up in that it's an attempt by a writer to come to terms with his own hard experience. (For clues of just how chillingly autobiographical this novel is, read Bailey's book on Yates.) It is different from much of Yates other work because it leaves open the possibility of redemption. Images of spring, Easter, and resurrection haunt the novel, and the book's end features a priest named Peter who literally holds the keys of a possible new life. And there's a final confession of humility which truly stands out in American literature (something else it shares with "The Crack-Up.") Lest anyone think it's a complete downer, it's often grimly funny in the way rather harrowing irony can be. I snickered and squirmed all the way through the Andrew Crawford episodes; they're like horrible outtakes from "American Pie" movies. If you can take a high dose of tragedy, that burns as it heals, then "The Easter Parade" is for you. |
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Easter Parade by Richard Yates (Paperback - January 1, 2004)
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