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House Lights: A Novel [Paperback]

Leah Hager Cohen (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 17, 2008

“Tantalizing ... captivating ... provocative.”—Booklist

Late in her twentieth year, Beatrice, who dreams of a life on the stage, is confronting a home life torn asunder. She mails a letter on the sly to her grandmother, a legendary actress long estranged from the family, sparking events that will change her life forever. Powerfully written and psychologically intricate, House Lights illuminates the corrosive power of family secrets and the redemptive struggle to find truth, forgiveness, and love.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In the overly precious third novel from Train Go Sorry author Hager Cohen, Beatrice Bebe Fisher-Hart is the almost 20-year-old only child of two coolly articulate Boston therapists. Bebe's parents duly swallow their mortification and allow her to remain at home, all expenses paid, when she decides to defer college to have a serious go at acting, like her estranged maternal grandmother, Margaret Fourcey. A retired theater actress with a legendary reputation, Margaret lives just across the Charles River, but Bebe hardly sees her and knows little about her life or her estrangement from the family. When Bebe finds out her revered father may have been professionally inappropriate, she lashes out in disillusion and anger, and takes refuge with Margaret. Her paternalistic relationship with theater director Hale Rubin, a 50-ish member of her grandmother's salon, deepens. Hale is an idealized character, tailor-made to fill the gap left by Bebe's father's fall from grace, and Bebe, while more-or-less sanguinely tempered, is just this side of annoyingly narcissistic. Bebe's struggles are believable, but the hothouse atmosphere makes the stakes feel small, and Bebe herself something less than likable. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

Finding no allure in the precisely scripted lives her parents have so painstakingly crafted, Beatrice chooses instead to forego college and pursue her dream of becoming an actress. The most expedient route is a letter asking advice of her estranged grandmother, iconic actress Margaret Fourcey, who admits her granddaughter into her weekly salons, where she meets—and falls in love with—a famous director who is old enough to be her father. And therein lies the heart of Cohen's adroitly subliminal drama, for Beatrice's father, a practicing psychologist and university professor, stands accused of sexual harassment by one of his graduate students, an allegation that reveals a disturbing pattern of behavior that sends Beatrice headlong into a relationship that she will question for the rest of her life. Tantalizing in its evocation of emotional fragility and piercing in its interpretation of subconscious desires, Cohen's captivating family drama thrums with a sensitive authenticity that is all the more provocative thanks to its poignant lyricism. Haggas, Carol --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; Reprint edition (July 17, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393332721
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393332728
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #361,131 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Leah Hager Cohen is the author of four non-fiction books, including Train Go Sorry and Glass, Paper, Beans, and three novels, most recently House Lights. Among the honors her books have received are New York Times Notable Book (four times); American Library Association Ten Best Books of the Year; Toronto Globe and Mail Ten Best Books of the Year; and Booksense 76 Pick.

She holds the Jenks Chair in Contemporary American Letters at the College of the Holy Cross, and teaches in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Lesley University. She is a frequent contributor to the New York Times Book Review.

www.leahhagercohen.com

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "They wanted me to learn things without having to assume responsibility for telling me.", July 17, 2007
This review is from: House Lights: A Novel (Hardcover)


Sometimes it is only upon reflection in our more mature years that it is possible to realistically assess the destruction of innocence, peeling away the layers of denial that once seemed so vital in interpreting family dramas. To review your past, your family, with an unerring and deliberate eye is a task fraught with danger, stripping fact from fiction, the threads of truth tangled in childhood memory. When Beatrice Fisher-Hart arranges to meet with her long-estranged maternal grandmother, Margaret Fourcey, a former actress of some repute, she believes it is only to further the dream of becoming an actress; but as Beatrice attends her grandmother's evening salons, the gatherings become more than opportunity, rather a place of psychic nourishment and reconnection with a woman she has never known. Beatrice's parents, both therapists, Dr. and Dr. Fisher-Hart, combine their offices and living quarters in their Boston home, but the genteel façade of professionalism is under assault, Beatrice's father, Jeremy, accused of sexual harassment.

Closing ranks, the Fisher-Hart's present their usual calm mien to the world; prompted by the shocking revelation of Jeremy Hart's indiscretion, Beatrice suddenly remembers an incident from her childhood, questioning, little by little, the rarified and controlled atmosphere of her environment; later she learns of other such shameful incidents, at nineteen barely able to fathom the significance of this new information. A revolt against family secrets slowly emerges as Beatrice joins a theatre workshop directed by Hale Rubin, one of the accomplished members of Margaret's salon. Increasingly, Beatrice views her life as a series of acts, achingly self-conscious as the house lights "suddenly illuminate the larger reality in which a play was being staged." On a painful journey of self-discovery that demands an honest recounting of family dynamics, Beatrice must at last acknowledge her parents' feet of clay and the role of a daughter in transition to adulthood, flirting with a serious romance that calls into question everything she has believed about herself.

The cultivated, civil atmosphere of Beatrice's relationship with her parents is intimately examined, doubts surfacing about the carefully hoarded memories that have defined her existence in a well-ordered world gone out of kilter with her Jeremy's intemperate actions. Although much of the novel seems too self-conscious, too perfectly sculpted, Hager injects the final pages with an immediacy and authenticity of surprising depth, the jagged emotions of a broken man who cannot ask for help, the uneasy peace between mothers and daughters, the healing power of unconditional love, and the winding path through a wilderness that has engulfed this small family. Beatrice's coming-of-age is handled with delicate precision, through the pitfalls of the past to a more navigable present, a plunge into the world of the theater and a marriage that is outside convention. Treading carefully, Beatrice takes to heart the hard lessons of love and loss and the surprising freedom of following her heart no matter what the cost. Luan Gaines/2007
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a nuanced, eloquent, accomplished novel, November 10, 2007
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This review is from: House Lights: A Novel (Hardcover)
Cohen is an underappreciated talent who has delicate, subtle powers of observation and who narrates with brilliant clarity the inner ways of the heart. This is a book about self-discipline and recklessness, about maturity as both a great loss and a great achievement, and it is written with almost unberable tenderness and kindess.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars House lights reveal the dirt, October 16, 2011
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This review is from: House Lights: A Novel (Paperback)
When the house lights go on, the magic and mystery of a play are somewhat diminished, not unlike what can occur in the real world when a veil is lifted. In fact, in this eye-opening novel, the long-cultivated, perfect image of the Fisher-Hart family of Boston is essentially torn away. It is Beatrice, their 20-year-old daughter, who is most affected. So much of her life has been wrapped up in the respect that colleagues and the community have held for her psychological therapist parents and in their refined life style.

Bea is suddenly totally adrift. Not only is she disappointing her parents by foregoing college to give acting a try, but at the same time that she has reached out to her well-known actress grandmother Margaret Fourcey, it becomes known that a credible claim of sexual harassment has been made against her father by a graduate student under his supervision, with predictable consequences. The magnanimity of Maggie essentially saves Bea, even though her mother has shunned any contact through the years. Bea sits in on wide-ranging discussions involving Maggie's theater friends, fueling her interest in acting, and furthermore learns of more disturbing secrets about her family, including her father.

While Bea does manage to achieve a modicum of success in the world of acting over the next twenty years, this entire story is most concerned with the lasting impact on a family of troubling developments. There are so many questions. Does one inevitably over compensate in some way? What are the possibilities of reconciliation? In the author's telling, primarily through Bea but also Maggie, it is a lifetime's work to regain the stability that at one time was simply assumed. It's not really much of an option to simple forego the effort - a large hole in one's heart is generally the result.

In any event, this novel is a sensitive, insightful look at what can happen to a family, especially to a sheltered daughter, when their idyllic world comes crashing down.
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