From Publishers Weekly
Better living through chemistry. That's what Francie Hart, the Stepford wife–like protagonist of this melodramatic novel by Kowalski (
Eddie's Bastard, etc.), thought she was getting by taking Benedor to treat her manic depression. But on a trip with her husband, Colt, from their home in Manhattan to visit their newly purchased country house, she runs out of pills. As the drug's effects wear off, Francie realizes that the chemicals had been stifling her natural creative powers as a poet, and that the life she was leading as a bored, wealthy urban housewife was unfulfilling. That shift in clarity is the linchpin of the novel, which chronicles the tense, awkward unraveling of the Harts' nearly 10-year marriage. Kowalski pumps up the plot by adding a parallel series of intense, often violent flashbacks focusing on the Musgroves, the family that built the Hart's country home 150 years earlier. Not even a whirlwind of outlandish developments—from grave desecration and fratricide to space travel and kidnapping—are enough to make up for the novel's one-dimensional characters, however. Colt is a comically arrogant stock broker, while Francie is the stereotypical tortured artiste who just wasn't made for this cruel world. Kowalski's vigorous storytelling will keep the pages turning, but it's hard to muster much sympathy for Francie and Colt's struggles and redemption.
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In his fourth novel, Kowalski (
Eddie's Bastard, 1999) offers a modern morality tale with a surprisingly powerful emotional wallop. High-flying Manhattan stockbroker Colt Hart and his beautiful but emotionally fragile wife, Francie, both fall in love with a 150-year-old house in rural Pennsylvania. As the two make plans to furnish the lovely old home, it becomes apparent that they have entirely different agendas, not only about the house but also about their life together. Colt sees the rural retreat as a chance to impress clients with his wealth, while Francie, a once promising poet, goes off the antidepressant medication she has been on for years and starts to observe her surroundings with renewed clarity. Suddenly, the simmering tensions in their 10-year-old marriage come to a boil, especially after Colt engages in a nasty confrontation with their new neighbor. At first, Kowalski seems to be ranging far and wide, with heavy background material on the original owners of the house and many meandering conversations, but he meticulously brings the strands of his narrative together, building toward a credible, moving conclusion.
Joanne WilkinsonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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