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A cogent warning indeed, for as in all of Hoffman's novels, the question of whom one chooses to love and who loves in return is the crux of the matter. The River King revolves around triangles. First there is Betsy Chase, a young photography teacher at the Haddan School who has gotten herself engaged--almost accidentally--to a fellow faculty member, even as she is inexorably drawn to Abel Grey, a town policeman. Then there are Carlin Leander, a scholarship student, and her best friend, Gus Pierce. While Carlin is able to fit in, even attracting the interest of the most popular boy on campus, Gus is a defiant outcast, a tall skinny kid in a long black overcoat "who viewed his own life as a prison sentence and experienced his existence much as a condemned man might." Carlin's romance with the charismatic, cruel Harry McKenna creates a rupture between her and Gus, and fuels a mean-spirited practical joke with horrific consequences. In the aftermath of tragedy, each character's heart, conscience, and courage is tested in unexpected ways.
Hoffman spins her web of love and heartbreak and transcendence with a sure hand, and in the process creates characters so palpably human in all their petty flaws and small instances of heroism that one almost expects them to step out of the book and into the room. Indeed, if there is a flaw in The River King, it is that Alice Hoffman doesn't always trust the magic inherent in her characters, relying a little too heavily at times on somewhat precious invocations of the otherworldly. But this is a minor defect in an otherwise satisfying novel, one that will keep the reader spellbound by its emotional complexity and compelling story. --Alix Wilber --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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To truly experience Alice Hoffman's work, you need the ability to suspend all rational thought for a bit. Hoffman's tales are conjured with both a writer's voice and a magician's wand. She is never boring.
In THE RIVER KING, Ms. Hoffman tells the story of a small town in Massachusetts...she divides the town into the haves and the have nots. An elite private school adds to the class distinctions.
When one of Haddan School's students is found drowned in the troubled Haddan River, city and students alike are effected.
Haddan School's own troubled past becomes part of Hoffman's tapestry. The fragrance of roses appears in the middle of winter. Fish appear out of nowhere. The dead boy's image shows up in photographs. Bees swarm in October. Mysterious illness strikes students. No one rests until the mystery is solved.
THE RIVER KING is one of Hoffman's best efforts. It is not light, easy, summertime reading. It is to be savored and will linger with you long after you've finished. Like Hoffman's past work, some mysteries are solved. Some will never be.
That's what it's like to read a good Alice Hoffman story.
Enjoy!
And while Alice Hoffman's latest book, The River King, is also filled with imagery and a writer's vivid imagination, as a reader I felt as though something went wrong with this book. And I'm stil not sure what happened since I have always enjoye dHogfman's books mreo than other authors'.
The River King takes place at a boarding school where previously all sorts of strange things have happened. It is a classic tale of the haves and the have nots as students from various backgrounds assmeble the first day. One motherless young man is sent by his father to try and make his way in the world while a young woman,a scholarship student, feels very out of place. The teachers have made their own alliances while the old timers reminisce about the way things use to be. And rounding out the characters are the townspoeple clearly though to be the have nots and yest the ones who are keepers of the Haddan School secrets.
What a young man is found floating in the river, an investigation begins to see, if in fact, he killed himself by drowning or if he was killed. With a cast of interesting and eccentric charcters, I thought this book would have been as good as some of Hoffman's other titles. Unfortunately, nothing in this book really grabbed me or caused me to gulp it down. Also, the topic wasn't that new or or presented in a fresh manner that I finsihed it with that feeling that I was sad it ended.Ultimately I was left disappointed in the plot and outcome.
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