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The Free: A Novel Paperback – Deckle Edge, February 4, 2014

4.4 out of 5 stars 84 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial (February 4, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0062276743
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062276742
  • Product Dimensions: 5.3 x 0.7 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (84 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #207,214 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
When i finished this book, i put in my lap and quietly said to myself,"Wow, life goes on". This is the best book I have read since William Kent Krueger's "Ordinary Grace", and there have been many books in between. Willy Vlautin has captured me aa a new fan and I have just ordered his three previous novels. Read this book everyone...ypu won't be disappointed.
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Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Brief summary and review, no spoilers.

This heartfelt and moving story is narrated by three main characters - Leroy Kervin, Freddie McCall, and a kind-hearted middle-aged nurse named Pauline Hawkins.

Leroy Kervin was a young man who joined the National Guard in Oregon as a way to keep favor with his boss. He was subsequently sent to Iraq where he was horribly injured by a roadside bomb and suffered a dire brain injury. The story starts out with Leroy living in a group home for the past 8 years when suddenly he becomes aware of his surroundings. Panicked and full of despair, he is afraid his clarity will be short-lived and tries to do something desperate. We find out that Leroy had been in love and lived with a young woman name Jeanette. They were both science fiction fans and often read to each other. While in the hospital, Leroy escapes his unbearable situation by disappearing in his imagination with Jeanette - in essence becoming "free". But his real physical ailments and painful memories have a way of incorporating themselves into his imaginary world.

Freddie McCall is the night caretaker at the group home where Leroy is staying. Freddie has an ex-wife and two children he adores who have moved away with their mother. He works at the group home at night and at a paint store during the day, all which take a toll on his physical and mental well-being. He has enormous hospital bills due to the congenital problems of his youngest child and he may lose his childhood home due to his financial woes. Freddie often visits Leroy in the hospital as he tries to figure out how to escape his looming financial and emotional ruin.

Pauline Hawkins is a nurse at the hospital.
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Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
The Free, by Willy Vlautin, is a beautiful and disturbing novel about three good people smacked down by life. They are each trying to survive in their own way despite horrific odds.

There is Leroy Kerwin, a young man and National Guard volunteer, who was sent to Afghanistan after 9/11. He was hit by an IED and is suffering extreme traumatic brain injury. He lives in a group home and his mind is clouded and he can't perform his activities of daily living. One day, inexplicably, his mind clears and he feels for the first time since his injury, like his old self. Fearful that this new state won't last, he attempts suicide by throwing himself down a flight of stairs and onto a wooden stake which pierces his chest. He survives the injury, just barely, and is hospitalized. While intubated and restrained, he retreats deeply into his mind where he manufactures a science fiction life which, to some extent, mirrors what is happening to him in real life. For instance, the protagonist of Leroy's inner world often has chest pain and trouble breathing. Like Leroy, he is fighting a barbaric war that is difficult to make sense of.

Freddie McCall, who works the night shift in the group home, is the one who finds Leroy after his suicide attempt. Freddie is a truly decent and good man who, in every sense, is at odds with circumstance. He works two full-time jobs, barely eats or sleeps, and is in debt over his head. He has two daughters who live with his ex-wife in another state. One of his daughters has serious health problems and has incurred extremely high medical bills, creating the need for Freddie to twice morgage the home he once owned free and clear.
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2 Comments 9 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
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Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Three people living and working in a group home for the disabled are intertwined in a struggle for life that seems filled with unhappiness. Leroy, severely wounded in the Iraq War lives in the group home and for 8 years has struggled for a more independent life. Freddie is an employee at the home and works two jobs but is being overwhelmed in debt. Pauline, a nurse at the home is also having a hard time. All three find ways to escape their lives and attempt to make it better. Very meaningful story and on many Best of lists for 2013.
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Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
There are books that are so exquisitely written with a simple story that touch your very soul. This is one of those books. People have called Vlautin the modern Steinbeck and his writing in this book is just that good. Still the story reminds me so much of "To Kill A Mockingbird" in its simplicity, strength and character development. It kept me up last night as I couldn't let go of these characters so I could sleep. Tears tickled as I finished it and I am sure it will be with me for some quite some time. It's message? Real heroes are among us all and they are people who try to make their way through life as best they can with a quiet dignity and humility.

There are three separate stories but they overlap and move seamlessly between each other. Leroy Kervin was seriously injured in the Iraq War and has been living in a group home in Oregon. One day he wakes up and, in a moment of clarity, tries to take his future into his own hands. Freddy McCall works at Kervin's group home and carries his own set of problems. One of his daughters was born with a disability and the medical bills are drowning McCall. He works two jobs and is in danger of losing his house that has been in his family for generations. When Kervin is moved to a hospital, his nurse is Pauline Hawkins. Pauline is struggling too with a mother who abandoned her at 5 and with the care of her mentally ill father.

It sounds depressing, doesn't it? It is not. It's actually quite uplifting. You see people going through their every day lives, carrying their burdens and yet reaching out to others with love and help. They have souls that seem to know instinctively how to help others and make them better. No matter what life has thrown at them, they do not become bitter. They just want things to better.
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