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Strangers at the Feast
 
 

Strangers at the Feast [Kindle Edition]

Jennifer Vanderbes
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (47 customer reviews)

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Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

An unhappy family creeps toward a violent tragedy in Vanderbes's misfired sophomore novel (after Easter Island). Every one of the Olsons who gather on Thanksgiving Day, 2007, has issues. Matriarch Eleanor, adrift after years of ministering to a husband who never recovered from his Vietnam war experience, is flummoxed by her children's choices: her unmarried college professor daughter, Ginny, has just adopted a mute Indian girl, and son Douglas is up to his neck in the real estate bubble, prompting the ire of his wife, Denise, who can barely stand the ineptitude of Ginny's attempt at cooking Thanksgiving dinner. Then there's Kijo, who is out for revenge after one of Douglas's real estate deals gets his grandmother's home condemned. When Ginny's oven fails and the Olsen family decamps to Denise and Douglas's McMansion, the catastrophe that ensues will, of course, change and bind the lives of everyone involved. But without the love story, historical intrigue, and exotic locale of Easter Island, Vanderbes spins her wheels on a toothless Corrections-lite family saga that winds its way to an ever-so-unlikely big bang conclusion.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In her second novel, Vanderbes (Easter Island, 2003) sets up a Thanksgiving Day showdown between a well-to-do family and the impoverished residents of a housing project. Anthropology professor and new mother Ginny Olson is hosting the Thanksgiving Day festivities for the first time. She has just returned from India, where she adopted a mute seven-year-old girl. Interactions with her family prove to be irritating as they lecture her on her disorganized hosting skills, and she lectures them on their woefully inadequate understanding of America’s bloody past, especially the genocidal overtones of the Thanksgiving holiday. The guests include her taciturn dad, her well-meaning but clueless mom, and her wealthy brother, whose overinvestment in an office project just as the real-estate downturn hit has made his wife one angry lady (her cold-eyed pragmatism provides much of the book’s entertainment value). A stove malfunction forces the family to move houses and sets them on an inevitable collision course with two young black men. Vanderbes lays on the cultural ironies a little too thickly in what is otherwise an inventively plotted, highly readable novel about white Americans’ overweening sense of entitlement. --Joanne Wilkinson

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1992 KB
  • Publisher: Scribner; 1 edition (August 3, 2010)
  • Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B003L785ME
  • Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (47 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #100,513 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

47 Reviews
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 4.5/5, August 3, 2010
The Olson family gathers to celebrate the Thanksgiving holidays at the home of one of its members, Ginny. Ginny has recently made some drastic changes to her life, adopting a daughter from India, buying a house and her decision to host the family for this event is surprising but seems to be in line with this new phase of her life. Her brother Douglas and his wife Denise are drowning in severe debt as a result of Douglas's over speculation in the real estate market that has now gone bust. So while they smile and put on an appearance for their children and the rest of the family, there is trouble brewing. And Ginny and Douglas's parents, Eleanor and Gavin, are dealing with their own loneliness as they were never very communicative with each other following Gavin's return from the Vietnam war. While the meal starts off at Ginny's house, they are forced to move to Douglas's house because Ginny's stove malfunctions. This simple act sets the stage for a tragedy and calls into stark focus the underlying issues that have long simmered below the surface.

From the synopsis of the book, I knew there was to be a catastrophic event that would rock the whole family. But because this part of the story does not happen till much later, I was able to focus on the excellent characterization of the family that preceded this event. It is in the description of the individual members of this family, their quirks and demons, their sympathies and triumphs, that the author really shines and displays her talent as a writer. The reader is able to delve into the lives of a complex and ultimately sad family. To call this family dysfunctional really does not do them justice as they are so much more and it cheapens and trivializes their true intricacies. Each member of the family harbors private concerns, pains and resentments that shape them into the people they choose to become. Ginny as the know it all college professor and generally unlikable daughter on the spur of the moment adopts a mute seven year old from India. While I could sympathize with almost all other members of her family, Ginny was the character I liked least. She spent her time throwing around her intelligence, constantly lecturing her family on every injustice in history and just being generally obnoxious. Her decision to adopt a child did not at all engender her to me as it was not well thought out and just seemed like a momentary emotion and a poorly thought out one at that. She always seemed to be caught up in displaying her supposed intellectual superiority that she rarely took a moment to examine herself and her motives. I never warmed to her and her thoughts on the last page further confirmed my belief in how shallow she was.

Ginny's brother Douglas was a sad character to read. Here was a man who both consciously and unconsciously lived to please his father and feeling like this was an impossible goal. But the more he tried, the more he seemed to drift away from and displease his father. Sadly, his father returned from the Vietnam war an uncommunicative and taciturn man who shut his wife and the subsequent family they would have out of his inner thoughts. By the time he realizes his love for his wife and his family, both they and he had grown used to his aloofness. Gavin's character was a sad character to read because the reader is privy to his feelings and thoughts and so sees him more sympathetically than his family for whom he is a distant figure inspiring fear, longing, exasperation but nothing outside of obligatory familial love. Eleanor his wife was the typical sixties wife who believed that since her husband worked hard, provided for his family, never brutalized her or her children, she would put up with his remoteness. The amalgamation of all these personalities leads to the family who we meet at the beginning of the story. The final crime that occurs during this family gathering is not as monumental as I had originally thought it would be but served as the catalyst that ignites tensions long held.

This story resonates the lack of communication that characterizes many of our lives. The stored up hurts that pile up over the years, the unspoken emotions, the remembered sins, unspoken praises, will in many cases produce individuals and families that navigate life in a maze, never acknowledging the underlying causes of various actions. This book is sad and I think most people will find it very depressing and may see the whole story in a negative light. But if one is willing to see beyond this, you will find a story that makes you ponder the complexity of relationships and their fundamental meaning.

*Review copy received from Simon and Schuster.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I DEVOURED This Feast...!, August 7, 2010
Let me say it straight out: this book is astoundingly GOOD. Page-turning, jaw-dropping, laugh-out-loud, cry-into-your-sleeves, gasp-with-recognition GOOD. It takes on nothing less than the theme of what is wrong with America today and it does it very well.

The action takes place over one Thanksgiving day with lots of flashbacks. There hasn't been a family like the Olsons since Zoe Heller's The Believers - with a dollop of the movie Pieces of April blended in. This family DEFINES dysfunction.

Gavin, the father, is a Vietnam vet whose career went wildly off track because of the anti-war sentiment when he returned. His wife Eleanor is a Wellesley graduate who traded in ambitions for an apron and a cookbook. Douglas, their older son, cashed in on the real estate boom - making him more successful than his old man ever was - and is now suffering the effects of the crash. His wife Denise - a one-time poor girl who has become enamored of the money - is less than enchanted with him. Ginny, the academic daughter, is emotionally closed-off and has recently adopted a 7-year-old Indian daughter, Priya,

Add to that two 17-year-olds from the housing projects - Kijo and Spider - who have a personal grudge against Douglas and break-in and enter his home while they're temporarily away - and you have the makings of a potentially tragic situation.

The author, Jennifer Venderbes, has a clear understanding of the human condition. Her dialogue is crisp, compelling, and pithy. There are little gems throughout this book. For instance: "Men didn't have heroes, they STUDIED heroes, as though greatness and masculinity could be transmitted through reading, as though knowing the lyrics to every Mick Jagger song...got them one step closer to playing Madison Square Garden. A woman, at most, would dress like the woman she admired..."

There is much about the emasculation of the American warrior (Ginny is writing a paper on it), and how Vietnam was directly responsible for this phenomenon; this emasculation will show up time and time again. There is much about eminent domain and how it plays out in the real world, particularly with race relationships. There is much about how we - as Americans - have lost our sense of values and have substituted it with worship of money and status.

But the book is never preachy or never pedantic. It's filled with smart conversation, convincing characters, compassion and insights. Portions will make you laugh with recognition, other portions will break your heart. In a way, this is a portrait of the "every family." You won't soon forget the Olsons or the world that Jennifer Venderbes has so expertly created.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Explores and explodes American myths, August 24, 2010
American mythologizing of Thanksgiving is still perpetuated--the idea of goodwill between Indigenous Americans and European "pilgrims" and the lie that America was founded on cooperation and integrity rather than eminent domain and genocide. The myth of the first Thanksgiving shapes and parallels the thematic core of Vanderbes' new novel, a scathing, biting, and bitterly droll portrait of a suburban family that takes place on Thanksgiving 2007. It is no coincidence that Stamford Connecticut, the site of the massacre against hundreds of Pequots by Puritans (and the cause for the second Thanksgiving celebration), is the story's site of greedy real estate expansion and criminal expropriation under the deception of eminent domain and public safety.

On the one hand, this story of the Olsens can be read as a novel of a modern-day dysfunctional family in America. This includes a Yale graduate turned Vietnam vet (Gavin); Gavin's Wellesley grad wife, Eleanor, who spent her entire adult years as a housewife; their leftist academic daughter, Ginny, who majored in the history of the American family and who, as a single mother, adopted a mute, seven-year-old orphan from India; their son, Douglas, a real-estate entrepreneur on the verge of bankruptcy due to the subprime crash; and Douglas's wife, Denise, who escaped her blue-collar roots in Pittsburgh and desires a comfortable, upper-middle class comfort zone for them and their three children.

On the other hand, Vanderbes probes beneath the family itself and mines deep into the myths that underlie and underscore the American dream, as well as taking on issues of race, class, and the basis of war and the male warrior mentality.

The novel could be said to be a pastiche of Wharton, Franzen, Updike, Roth, Bellow, and other prolific writers of social criticism and the nuclear family. But Vanderbes puts her own thumbprint on this tragedy, especially with her creation of Eleanor Olsen. Eleanor is a shattering composite of strength and fragility, a fiercely loyal and upright wife and mother who is also a sad and fractured soul. There is a private moment between her and Gavin that centers on a singular opportunity for Eleanor to write professionally. It is so penetrating and heart-stopping that I had to put down the book and weep. Moreover, her palpable sense of exile throughout the story just blew me away.

"Her friend...noticed the same thing: this menopausal cloak of invisibility. They were a forsaken demographic...Still, she sometimes wished she had known that a time would come when the world would quietly brush her under the rug, suggest she kindly step out of its way."

As the family gathers at Douglas and Denise's McMansion in Greenwich, a crime invades their tenuous peace and shatters the shaky boundaries between the privileged and the poor, the dominant and the dislocated. And in this novel, the shock waves occur after the denouement. The climax is the cauldron and the anti-climax is the scorching segment of the story, the boiling spill that turns everything upside down.

This is a page-turner that reads like a domestic thriller. It isn't without its annoyances, such as Ginny's irritating and pedantic political correctness that borders on fanatic. However, the author has a purpose here and deals with it quite capably . Each person will surprise you; just when you think you are in-step with events and tuned into the characters, the narrative tilts and shifts you into a gear that simultaneously revs you up and brings you to a grinding halt. This is a savage must-read to feast on. The prose is tart; the words are edible.
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More About the Author

Jennifer Vanderbes is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and the recipient of numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and a New York Public Library Cullman Fellowship. Her debut novel, Easter Island, was translated into sixteen languages, and her essays and reviews appear in The New York Times and Washington Post. She lives in New York City.

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