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9 Reviews
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Storm Riders Delivers,
By A Customer
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Hardcover)
Craig Lesley's Storm Riders explores the bonds between his characters with a clear-eyed, unvarnished honesty and complexity borne of compassion for people and dedication to craft. There are no easy answers for Clark Woods and Wade White Fish. Lesley illuminates the dark corners of each dead-end, exposes the flaws in pat answers and pop theories, and renders true the enduring love and faith binding Clark to Wade when he could blameslessly walk away. Craig Lesley rounds his characters out with the imperfections and frustrations that leave the reader wholly convinced and engaged as they negotiate what is broken and cannot be fixed. As with Lesley's earlier novels (Winterkill, Riversong, and The Sky Fisherman) his passion for authenticity and devotion to detail are evident on every page as the novel moves from Massachusetts to Oregon to Alaska. Storm Riders is a personal, powerful, haunting, and healing effort from one of our finest novelists.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You Should Read This One,
By A Customer
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Hardcover)
Craig Lesley's book is really terrific. His character's story of trying to raise a Native Alaskan child, whose mother had been alcoholic, shows exceptional compassion. Lesley's central character tries everything to help this young boy--time, effort, schools, experts, everything. Having worked with children with difficulties, I was deeply moved.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sorm Riders a Good Read,
By Hank Slangal (Oregon City) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Hardcover)
Craig Lesley's Storm Riders is a very good read. I don't often anymore find a book that I want to keep reading right to the end. This is such a book. I wished for more. Lesley has the gift of the story-teller. He's a born yarner. This is his fourth novel, and I think he reaches higher here than in the others. Less landscape, more heartscape. The many crises in raising a child damaged by fetal alcohol syndrome are rendered convincingly and movingly. In a deceptively plain style, Lesley peoples complex events with well-rounded characters. Wade, the mentally damaged child who shares the focus of the novel, is utterly alive to me in his sometimes charming, often frightening behavior. Wade's stepdad Clark is for the most part a model of patience and commitment, so much so that I had to ask myself if he weren't too virtuous and strong. I asked myself whether I knew any such dads. The answer is yes, several of them. I hear dad-bashing so often -- deadbeat dads, you know-- it's wonderful to read at last about a really good dad, portrayed realistically. Clark is no ivory saint, but he's as good a dad as you'd ever want. Another reviewer has questioned Lesley's decision to write this story of his own experiences as fiction rather than straight exposition. I feel, as probably many others do, that story-telling is a primary means of sharing. Lesley is a novelist, not a psychologist. The same reviewer objected to Lesley's detailed commentary about the U. S. Navy's massacre of Tlingit villagers more than 100 years ago. I found the commentary both interesting and functional. Sounds to me like praising with faint damns.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
His best so far,
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Paperback)
Lesley's fourth novel, "Storm Riders," is his best so far. This is not to take away from his previous efforts - his work just keeps getting better and better. The story of a man who tries to be an adopted father to a mentally disabled Tlingit Indian boy (his ex-wife's cousin) and then eventually fails is handled with compassion and almost brutal honesty, otherwise a standard trait of Lesley's writing style. Lesley's ability to portray the problems of the `little guy' and those living on society's peripheries (to paraphrase Ursula Le Guin's characterization of his writing) is unparalleled; an entire battalion of bleeding-heart journalists and weekend social activists couldn't do a better job if they tried.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
After the Storm,
By bookworm (Washington) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Paperback)
My first book by this author, but I'm not impressed. Usually I find I agree with a lot of the other reviewers but not this time. I find it very slow reading, I'm almost finished.
I think the adults in this story had more problems than Wade. And the language they used around him was disgusting, not to mention the horror stories he was entertained with. The stuff that came out of Wade's mouth at age 10 should never have been dismissed. It's too bad alcohol is made so available in such a remote village. It just ruined those young teens.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Life, and everything else,
By E. Johan Mathiasen (Washington) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Paperback)
Just as in real life we must stop to laugh at the small almost insignificant aspects, even if they come at the worst of times. This book, though not intended to be, is very funny because it points to the very nature of life that makes the hard times bearable. This is one of the first books by a contemporary author I am suggesting my friends read. A well written, well thought out novel with deep, complex characters with real flaws, tough feelings and emotions not seen enough. Lesley is truly a Pacific Northwest writer drawing from the beauty and landscape that makes many of our backyards escape into the beauty of an Oregon horizon. And whose characters are divinely independent while still needing people to survive. A novel worth reading.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wade has a tough time even with Clark's help,
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Hardcover)
In the novel Storm riders, Clark tries to bring up a boy with learning disabilities, and he has a difficult time with his own life do to the extra pressures he has assumed. A very good look at the problems of being a native american among whites, and at the types of people and their reactions to the boy Wade. As always, Lesley is a pleasure to read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Moving Testimony to Hope,
By
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Paperback)
Storm Riders, simply stated is a sumptuous novel that probes deep into the hearts and minds of anyone who wanted to help another rise above their disabilities, but didn't know how. People who believe they have the tools to create miracles, but end up feeling ineffectual. It will touch the souls of those who dare to care for disadvantaged citizens who go unnoticed and written-off. A Northwest author, Lesley's Storm Riders captures the spirit and unique essence of life in Oregon. His ability to capture the authentic spirit of the Northwestern and illustrate it with the struggles and tragedies of Clark Woods is Lesley's true gift to the modern novel.Craig Lesley's Storm Riders examines the life of Clark Woods as he strives to obtain a balance in a universe that looks to hold no hope, repose, or closure for him. Longing for a happy domestic life with children, Clark convinces his wife Payette to take in her young orphaned cousin, Wade and raise him as their own. Wade, a native Alaskan Indian comes to Clark and Payette a victim of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and suffers mental and emotional damage. In addition, Wade cannot read or write and often cannot distinguish reality from fantasy. Clark's blind sympathy for the boy and his own desire for children cloud his vision to the negative impetus Wade has on his life. Unable to handle the unpredictable nature of Wade, in addition to her own selfish desires, Payette divorces Clark. Wade is left in his care. Desperate to seek solutions to Wade's disabilities, Clark desires to find meaning, and solace to problems that have no apparent logical definition. It is when Wade becomes a suspect in the drowning of a young Asian girl, Clark beings to question his ability to support him. Frustration and anger plague Clark as he forces himself to recognize that love and faith alone may not defeat Wade's disabilities. Meanwhile, as the drowning of the young Asian girl haunts Clark, he builds a new life and relationship with his girlfriend Natalie. Troubled that Wade's irrational and erratic behavior will once again destroy Clark's chance at domestic bliss, he strives to find balance between his longing for a life with Natalie, and supporting Wade. At times full of helplessness, and frustration Storm Riders asks us what our duty is to those we cannot help. What is the roll of society in caring for children with mental disorders? More importantly, it longs to find solutions and tools to problems that are beyond our comprehension. In a bold move, Lesley does not offer solid solutions to Wade's mental illness, or his potential involvement in the death of the Asian girl. Instead he offers the following: "Change, the shift of fortune, lay beyond his control. Even Wade's destiny eluded him. Clark now realized that at times he had been as powerless as the old shamans in dealing with Wade's problems. However, for the moment Wade was blalanced. Angoon seemed to be the right place, if the clan actually helped the boy during the storms Clark had to be satisfied with that hope." Written with grace, passion and the spirit of life in the Northwest, Storm Riders is a powerful and engaging novel. A book to be read by those who believe trust in the human spirit is deserved. A masterful work with a strong emotional spirit, and a moving testimony that hope is the foremost tool for survival we have. About my grading system: I interpret Amazon.com's five-star ranking system as follows: 1 star = far below standards, 2 stars = below standards, 3 stars = meets standards, 4 stars = exceeds standards, 5 stars = far exceeds standards.
2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Storm Riders: A Novel (Hardcover)
This is such a moving and dynamic book! It's about a young man named Clark who finds himself raising his former wife's cousin's son. When young Wade loses his father, Clark and his then-wife, Payette (a Tlingit Indian from Alaska) decide to adopt him. What they weren't told was how badly damaged Wade was from both fetal alcohol syndrome and from abuse stemming from his mother's many boyfriends. This book tells the story of a young man who is trying to prove himself as a father, but learns that some things can't always be fixed, such as Wade. Eventually, Clark and his new wife realize that Wade is a threat to their baby daughter and are forced to give him up to another foster home. Unfortunately, much of Wade's time is spent behind bars. This is a powerful story of a terrible situation handled gently, and most important lovingly. |
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Storm Riders: A Novel by Craig Lesley (Hardcover - February 1, 2000)
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