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Looking for Heroes
 
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Looking for Heroes [Paperback]

Patricia Grossman (Author)

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Book Description

April 30, 2007
Something's not quite right in Emma and Gerald's four-bedroom house on Hawthorne Drive in suburban Long Island. Emma Mallick has recently lost her job at a NYC social service agency and finds herself longing for the undomesticated landscape of her childhood summers in Maine, a place where people think of thunderstorms as dazzling spectacles and do not hide from them as she and her neighbors do. Emma's husband Gerald Strauss finds no satisfaction in his thriving radiology practice-indeed, begins to view it as he might any crass means of turning a profit. And Aaron, their 18-year-old son, is not following what one of Gerald's medical partners calls "the approved and prescribed path to adulthood." He and his boyfriend Fernando, a model, are not entering college in the fall.

More than ever, both Emma and Gerald's fathers loom large. Taking over the estate of her father, the painter David Mallick, Emma is forced to reconsider their relationship more deeply than she's prepared to. At the same time, Gerald and Emma grapple with what to do about Sid, Gerald's willful father, a quickly declining old man who refuses to think about his future realistically-or at all.

Husband and wife, but Gerald in particular, each find themselves needing a role model to lead the way-an archetypal figure most of their contemporaries would find quaint: an earnest and full-grown hero capable of integrating boldness with decency and altruism with self-fulfillment.

Looking for Heroes shows that no true inner longing can be shared, that the yearning that precedes transformation can estrange us from our families while bringing us closer to our ideals. It is a novel that forgives its characters' frailties, if not their fears, clearing the way for some form of grace.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

An uneven but affecting tale of suburban familial angst, Grossman's fifth novel follows Brian in Four Seasons. It's 1998, and Emma Mallick, at midlife, is weary of her sterile life in a gated community in Foster Mills, Long Island. She's been fired from her long-tenured social worker job, and her marriage to Gerald Strauss, a radiologist in private practice with a history of depression, is shaky and largely sexless—even Viagra fails them. Emma fills her days by administering her late father David's art estate, while Gerald sees hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold Mallory and studies biographies of do-gooders like Albert Schweitzer. The Clinton sex scandal dominates news and conversation, and this tired motif holds up a derisive mirror to Emma and Gerald's own hangups with intimacy, trust, and caring. Meanwhile, their gay son, Aaron (a stock figure), and Gerald's aging racist father, Sid (very credible), add to the sense of upheaval. Emma and Gerald can sense their disconnectedness, but can't find a way to bridge the gap. This serious-minded novel's shorter, final section shows Emma and Gerald finally overcoming their various anxieties and paralyses. While Grossman makes quiet desperation palpable, her tendency to overexplicate gives the proceedings a fussy air. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"One can only admire the subtle, nuanced portraits of Patricia Grossman's embattled characters in this perceptive, beautifully written novel." -- Marian Thurm, author of What's Come Over You

"With this novel, Patricia Grossman shows that the truth of a family can lie not in its well-lit, photo op moments but rather in its shadows." -- Carol Answhaw, author of Lucky in the Corner

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