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Red Hook Road [Audiobook, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Ayelet Waldman (Author), Kimberly Farr (Reader)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 13, 2010
As lyrical as a sonata, Ayelet Waldman’s follow-up novel to Love and Other Impossible Pursuits explores the aftermath of a family tragedy.

Set on the coast of Maine over the course of four summers, Red Hook Road tells the story of two families, the Tetherlys and the Copakens, and of the ways in which their lives are unraveled and stitched together by misfortune, by good intentions and failure, and by love and calamity.

A marriage collapses under the strain of a daughter’s death; two bereaved siblings find comfort in one another; and an adopted young girl breathes new life into her family with her prodigious talent for the violin. As she writes with obvious affection for these unforgettable characters, Ayelet Waldman skillfully interweaves life’s finer pleasures—music and literature—with the more mundane joys of living. Within these resonant pages, a vase filled with wildflowers or a cold beer on a hot summer day serve as constant reminders that it’s often the little things that make life so precious.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Pat Conroy Reviews Red Hook Road

Pat Conroy is the author of nine previous books: The Boo, The Water is Wide, The Great Santini, The Lords of Discipline, The Prince of Tides, Beach Music, My Losing Season, The Pat Conroy Cookbook: Recipes of My Life, and South of Broad. His newest book, My Life In Books, will be published in September. He lives in Fripp Island, South Carolina. Read his review of Red Hook Road:

In her latest novel, Red Hook Road, Ayelet Waldman has nailed the indelible mark that the state of Maine leaves on all visitors who fall for its subtle, insinuating glamour. Red Hook Road is a terrific novel, and might even be a great one. The structure of the book seems perfect to me; the first sentence sets up and readies us for the immense powers of the last one. It tells the stories of two families as different as the Montagues and the Capulets, but with the same tragic and irreversible destines playing out around them. The hardscrabble, working-class Hewins are native Mainers, the kind of family that keeps Maine vibrant during the cold months when the summer people return to their big-city homes. The Kimmelbrods are a sophisticated Jewish family from Manhattan; they are as cultured and passionate as the Hewins are no-nonsense and taciturn, as taciturn as lichens growing on the rocks of a church garden. Jane Hewins is a quintessential woman of Maine with an unviable sense of self and a home-bound integrity that could earn her a place on a Maine license plate along with a moose, a lobster, or a loon. Her big-city counterpart is Iris Copaken, a character who represents the highest level of Jewish culture. Iris has been vacationing with her family in Red Hook since birth, and Jane Hewins has cleaned the Copaken’s summer house for many years. The novel begins when Jane’s admirable son marries Iris’ delectable daughter; and great storm clouds form on the far horizon as Down East Maine meets the Upper East side in a glorious clash of the Titans.

Ayelet Waldman’s prose style is lovely and fresh. There is a brilliant scene that I’ve returned to again and again: The great violinist, Emil Kimmelbrod, finds the undiscovered talent of a small girl, Samantha Phelps, and brings out her instinctive mastery of rhythm, modulation, and perfect pitch. With language and example, Ayelet teaches me everything I didn’t know and can never know about music. It was like discovering a lost part of my life where I’m not only untalented, but unteachable. Each encounter of Kimmelbrod and Samantha in the book was exciting for me. Had I not read this book, I wouldn’t have understood that I’ve never really "heard" classical music before.

The structure of Red Hook Road is so perfect that I didn’t initially notice the sacred reverence for the beauty of wood both families share. The people of coastal Maine are aficionados of wooden boats, and their harbors fill up with boats that perform the same service as the highest works of art. The same joy of perfect woodwork manifests itself in Kimmelbrod as he cradles his Dembovski or considers the famous violins of Giussupe Guarneri del Gesu. You learn in this book that there is a strange kinship in the mahogany fittings of yachts and the lacquered pear wood of violins--Red Hook Road is an intricate dance between art and nature, between foreignness and belonging, between still waters and storm.

There are love stories being told all over this book, and like all great love stories, these are volatile and enduring and bright with astonishment. These characters now take up residence in the city I’ve built out of the books I love. This book made me happy, and happy to be alive. It took me out of my home on the coast of South Carolina, placed me in the town along Red Hook Road, and changed me the way good books always do.



Ayelet Waldman on Red Hook Road

There comes a moment at every literary event, a moment every author dreads, when the lights go up and the Q&A starts. The vast majority of the Q is fine (I can’t speak for the A, you’ll have to be the judge). What book am I reading now, when did I first want to become a writer, how do my children feel about the title of my last book. I like those Qs. I like especially the Qs that haven’t been asked before, the ones that give me a chance to depart from my practiced answers. I’m not as fond of the Q that begins with some version of, "I hated this book, but not as much as I loathed your last one," but I can handle that. (I find it usually helps to agree with the person and to suggest alternatives. Ian McEwan never disappoints.) The Q I loath and despise, the Q every single writer I know loathes and despises, is this one:

Where, the reader asks, do you get your ideas?

It’s a simple question, and my usual response is a kind of helpless, "I don’t know." But I do know. I’m just embarrassed to tell you. I get my ideas from you, or from your mother, or from someone else I run across to whom something bizarre or sad has happened, someone whose life is miserable, but in an interesting way. "Write What You Know," goes the old adage, but once you’ve written about what an unloved geek and freak you were in high school (and every writer I know claims to have been the most unhappy teenager who ever lived. Where were these people when I was sitting alone at the lunch table at George Washington Jr. High? I’d like to know. Couldn’t we have been sitting together?), once you’ve mined the exciting tale of your grandmother/grandfather’s immigration to America from Russia/Italy/China/Vietnam, once you’ve spent an entire novel complaining about how much it sucks to have to wake up in the middle of the night with the baby, then what?

I’ll tell you what. Other people’s misfortune. That’s where we get those ideas that inspire us (and, we hope, you). Most writers spend their lives standing a little apart from the crowd, watching and listening and hoping to catch that tiny hint of despair, that sliver of malice, that makes them think, Aha, here is the story.

My new novel, Red Hook Road, began many years ago as a short article in the newspaper. A bride and a groom (or was it the groom and the best man?) were killed on their way from the church to the reception, when a speeding car smashed into their limousine. The horror of that happening on that day, at that moment, when you are about to embark on a completely new life, where everything is possible and the future is all that is on your mind... that stuck with me for years. I’d think of it time and again, as anyone would.

A normal person thinks about that tragedy, and maybe gets sad all over again. A writer thinks of it and wonders, "Can I use this?"

Until one day, you can, and you do. --Ayelet Waldman

(Photo © Reenie Raschke)


--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Waldman (Love and Other Impossible Pursuits) delivers a dense story of irreparable loss that tracks two families across four summers. After John Tetherly and Becca Copaken die in a freak car accident an hour after their wedding, their families are left to bridge stark class and cultural divides, and eventually forge deep-rooted bonds thanks to the twin deities of love and music. Becca's family is well off, from New York, and summers in Red Hook, Maine, a small coastal town where John's blue-collar single mother, Jane, cleans houses for a living. They interact, awkwardly, over how to bury the couple, the staging of an anniversary party, and over Jane's adopted niece, whose amazing musical talent makes a connection to Becca's ailing grandfather, a virtuoso violinist, who agrees to give her lessons. Becca's younger sister, Ruthie, a Fulbright scholar, meanwhile, falls in love with John's younger brother, Matt, the first Tetherly to go to college, before he drops out to work at a boatyard and finish restoring his brother's sailboat, which he plans on sailing to the Caribbean. Though Waldman is often guilty of overwriting here, the narrative is well crafted, and each of the characters comes fully to life. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Random House Audio; Unabridged edition (July 13, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307735397
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307735393
  • Product Dimensions: 5.1 x 1.1 x 5.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,579,635 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

83 Reviews
5 star:
 (29)
4 star:
 (26)
3 star:
 (17)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (83 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

68 of 70 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully composed expression of life and death, June 26, 2010
This review is from: Red Hook Road: A Novel (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Red Hook Road is a beautifully composed piece of domestic fiction, one without flowery prose but clear and precise language which speaks plainly but with great sensitivity and empathy towards perhaps the most tragic of human experiences ~ the death of a loved one.

Ayelet Waldman has masterfully given voice to grief and recovery by way of in-depth psychological study which really gets under the skin and deep below the surface to expose the raw nerve of human emotion. With her skillfully wrought, omniscient third-person narrative, the reader is taken straight to the hearts of the story's seven main characters, each deeply and painfully stricken by the accidental death of two dearly loved family members. The seven represent two different families in a small coastal community in Maine, one Jewish and of privilege, the other Protestant and hard-scrabble. The Copaken/Kimmelbrods and the Tetherlys are each dominated by two strong willed and very controlling women, Iris Copaken and Jane Tetherly, the mothers upon whom much of the novel pivots.

The relationships between these seven main characters create the plot issues and conflicts which make up the story line. Although much of the focus seems to fall on Iris and Jane, it is the elder of the story, the deeply-grounded and wise father of Iris, Emil Kimmelbrod, who really drives the plot to ultimate resolution. His presence is subtle but authoritative and provides the story with complexity and depth. Mr. Kimmelbrod is a world-renowned maestro of violin, a Jewish refugee from WWII Prague, a survivor of the Holocaust which decimated most of his family. He has seen much death in his life and experienced much loss. Mr. Kimmelbrod brings a philosophical counterpoint to the novel which is moving and rich. It is a philosophy not only built upon his many life experiences but upon music, wherein music becomes an expression of life and of death. The message is nuanced and sure and I was deeply moved by its beauty and relevance.

It is also music that seems to give unique structure to this wonderfully expressive novel. Like a great piece of music, Red Hook Road is solidly built between a powerful prologue and an equally powerful coda. Within its body lie the themes and variations, the rhythms and tones of familiar human experience. I was particularly reminded of Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross's five stages of death: denial and isolation, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance, as could be applied to the grief of the novel's main characters. The reader will no doubt feel great empathy toward them. Each is fully developed and highly identifiable.

The story itself is highly atmospheric and very engaging with a denouement which is commanding, even mythical. It is sure to produce a lasting effect for the reader. I have found many passages throughout Red Hook Road which are so beautifully stated and unforgettable; they speak to me of experience and emotion I myself have known and I have marked and reread them several times. I applaud Ayelet Waldman for capturing these universal experiences and emotions so precisely, so eloquently, so memorably.

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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't Judge a Book..., July 5, 2010
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This review is from: Red Hook Road: A Novel (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Amazon's guide to reviews includes: "What would you have wanted to know before you purchased the product?" I would have wanted to know that, despite the cover and the description, this is more than just a chic book!

At the outset, a bride and groom die in an accident within an hour of their wedding. The remainder of the book is watching their two families deal, cope and try to adjust to the loss of the two young people who were the apples of their families' eyes.

About a quarter through, I thought "Is this all there is? Just mourning for a few hundered pages?" As difficult as that sounds, Ms Waldman really pulls it off. The account is captivating.

The family of the bride are New Yorkers, or as they are known in the tiny Maine village of Red Hook, "from aways". The mother's family ahs been summering so long there that she believes she and her family are an integral part of the fabric of the town. The groom's family are year 'rounders. His mother cleans the homes of the "from aways" (including the bride's) and maintains them during the winter months.

The book follows the summer immediately following the tragedy and the next few thereafter.

Iris, the bride's mother is the focal character, although her husband, father and other daughter also get plenty of focus. On the other side, Jane, the groom's mother and Matt, his brother, are also tracked. Each deals with the loss in his or her different way. Because Red Hook is so small and the families both integral to its character as natives or from aways, the families constantly interact. Their interactions weave through the individuals' stories. The interactions are not only between the individuals, but also between the two very different cultures from which they start. Jim and Becca, the couple were a bridge between the two, but are now gone.

This is a fine account of loss, mourning, coping and trying to heal by several different people who come from distinct cultures.

The writing is extremely good. The characters all have depth and, as one would expect, are seen at both their strongest and weakest. The emotions in this book are raw and always seemingly on the surface, yet the reader is also given hints of undercurrents beneath the outside and the spoken word. Every character copes in a different way with varying degrees of success.

This is highly recommended for its combing the depths of loss and emotion. It is not recommended for a light summer reading on the coast of Maine.
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45 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Lobster rolls but no Moxie, June 27, 2010
This review is from: Red Hook Road: A Novel (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Open up the lawn chair and get a cold drink from the cooler. Your summer reading (good for the beach, too!) is waiting for you. Ayelet Waldman's "Red Hook Road" is well written chick lit of the first order, and what's more, it's Maine chick lit. Lobsters and melted butter, blueberry pie, sailing on the bay, fearsome mosquitoes, battered pickups, Hannaford grocery stores---it's almost all there. (Inexplicably, there is no reference to Moxie, the beloved medicine-like soft drink.) The novel is set in Red Hook, Maine, thinly disguised as the actual Downeast town of Blue Hill, with its internationally known summer music festival, Kneisel Hall (Usherman Hall in the book).

Since "Red Hook Road" is meant to be a page-turner, I won't give away a bit of the plot, except to say that it is about two intertwined families and their responses to a tragedy that affects them both. The Copakens are long-time summer visitors from Manhattan or, as Mainers say, "from away." while the Tetherlys are local people. Most of the narration is from the point of view of the indomitable Iris Copaken, a Columbia professor whose specialty is Holocaust Studies, but the omniscient narrator occasionally steps away from Iris to provide insight into other characters. The novel takes place over the course of four summers, with only hints as to what happens in the intervening nine months. You can bet it's cold and bleak up in Red Hook, though, with only the Tetherlys to keep an eye on the closed up summer cottages.

There is a recurring thread of "from away" versus local tension in this novel, although Waldman does not mine this hoary theme with particular success. So dominant is Iris's persona that her opposite number, the house cleaner Jane Tetherly, is reduced to a sullen woman of few words whose only pleasant quality seems to be her ability to make a banana pudding from Nilla wafers that the "from aways" pretend to like. Waldman probably knows that the characterization of Mainers is not her forte; in the opening pages of the book, Iris's daughter Ruthie remarks on how her mother takes infinite pains to chat up the local women but can never shed her outsider status.

"Red Hook Road" ends with a microburst--the weather kind--but the denouement is a kind of prose microburst, too. Everything gets wrapped up VERY rapidly. (Wow, I wish my lawnmower started like the outboard on that unused dinghy in the unused shed!) I'm only giving the novel three stars, as it's not exactly enduring literature. However, as an accompaniment to a sweating glass of iced tea, it's better than a plateful of cookies.
M. Feldman
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