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Thanksgiving Night
 
 
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Thanksgiving Night (Hardcover)

by Richard Bausch (Author)
Key Phrases: Brother Fire, Richard Bausch, Oliver Ward (more...)
3.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
A house in Point Royal, Va., serves to entangle two families in clannish chaos. When local handyman Oliver Ward is summoned for a job at the house of Holly Grey and her aunt Fiona, he has no idea what to make of the two squabbling, headstrong old ladies who want to divide—literally—their house in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The two are known as "the Crazies" by Holly's son, bookstore owner Will Butterfield, and his wife, high school teacher Elizabeth, who are growing weary of their antics. But they pay Oliver, who begins working at the ladies' house. Oliver's daughter, policewoman and single mother Alison, is later called in to help talk Holly off the roof during a drunken dispute. Meanwhile, Will's grown children, Mark and Gail, from his first marriage (to another Elizabeth, who abandoned the family) are in disagreement over whether they should hunt down their long-gone mother. There are digressions: Gail's sexual identity is an open question; Elizabeth's students are fractious; Will finds himself tempted by a sexy, none-too-stable bartender. When Oliver has a stroke on the job, the two families are thrown together at Holly and Fiona's as the Thanksgiving holiday draws nigh. Author of nine novels and five story collections, Bausch (Wives & Lovers) engages stock characters and a predictable theme of holiday forgiveness this time out, but he injects some crackle into the heartwarming elements. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post
Some novelists are such gifted stylists and storytellers -- with profound insight into the best and worst that resides deep inside the human heart -- that a smaller person than I just might hate their guts. Okay, even a person my size might experience serious envy. Richard Bausch is such a writer. For a quarter-century now, in novels and short stories, he has turned a mirror on us and our next-door neighbors and shown us how real people live and laugh and cry. And, yes, how they get into all kinds of mischief.

His new novel, Thanksgiving Night, is big and sprawling but (by design) anything but epic. It's downright domestic. The book is set in the autumn of 1999, a new millennium is approaching, and on the surface everything is just fine in Point Royal, Va. Except that the marriage of Will and Elizabeth Butterfield is starting to fray as Will nears 50. And Will's mother, Holly, and her Aunt Fiona -- who is actually about Holly's age -- are fighting (again), and Fiona has climbed up on the roof of their house for the night. (These women are known, appropriately, as "the Crazies.") And Will's two grown children from his first marriage are squabbling once more and planning to bring their grievances with them to Virginia for a visit.

Meanwhile, Oliver, the building contractor who has been retained to literally divide Holly and Fiona's house in half so each woman can have a separate living space, is drinking too much. Oliver's daughter, Alison, a police officer in Point Royal, has separated from her husband, and her best friend has moved away. She has a little girl who is alarmingly quiet and a sweet and sensitive and sleepwalking teenage son who still likes to sleep in her bed when he is troubled. The boy's English teacher -- who happens to be Elizabeth Butterfield -- thinks the world of the young man, which is a good thing; his math teacher does, too, which is not good at all, given his unnatural longings for the boy.

Counseling many of this group at different points in the novel is Father John Fire, an elderly priest whose faith is starting to waver and who lives with a younger priest whose religious poetry is at once sincere and laughably bad. Listening to it daily is yet one more cross the erudite and somewhat aristocratic Fire must bear. ("The battering of God outshined the sun/And battered your heart as you said he did, Donne.")

Yes, there are enough major characters in Thanksgiving Night to fill a novel by Tolstoy. But they are all impeccably drawn and so deeply alive that you never need a scorecard or a family tree to keep track of who's who. And while there are myriad plots and subplots swirling throughout the group, perhaps the most central one involves Will and his extramarital dalliance with the lubricious and deeply unstable bartender named Ariana, who has moved in across the street from Will and Elizabeth and is fond of seducing Will at the small bookstore he owns.

In one of my very favorite moments, Ariana and her husband have come to Will and Elizabeth's home for dinner, and Will's anxiety is so palpable that the scene is excruciating, unbearable -- and riveting. Bausch doesn't have to resort to the pyrotechnics of boiled bunnies ("Fatal Attraction") or death by snow globe ("Unfaithful") to dramatize the tension that comes with adultery: He does it better with a few bottles of wine, some jazz on the CD player and a woman who wants to dance.

Bausch is also a master at capturing the wistfulness that can dog us all whenever we give ourselves license to think. Here is Alison, alone, just after she has found herself sobbing while doing the laundry: "The whole condition of the living universe, understood in the viscera and bone, is the feeling of something carved, by courage and necessity, out of fear. Alison thinks of the rabbit foraging in a field, one eye on heaven and what wheels and circles there among the fleecy clouds in the wide, bright blue. She fears loneliness with that same wrenching of the nerves and heart."

Bausch consistently mixes good cheer and humor with longing and (on occasion) despair, sprinkling them all into this satisfying feast of a book that feels authentic and wise. Sure, it's clear that by the time this whole extended crew gathers at Thanksgiving most of their problems will have been resolved. But Bausch is such a companionable writer, and his characters so consistently genuine, that I never stopped turning the pages with enthusiasm, wonder and a delight in life's endless possibilities.

Reviewed by Chris Bohjalian
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins; 1 in number line and states edition (October 3, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060094435
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060094430
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #924,491 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Holiday Read!, November 11, 2006
Great Read! Couldn't wait to see what happened next to the crazy but loveable characters of Point Royal, Virginia. With Bausch's attention to detail and the myriad of events, you will know them all intimately by the time the turkey is served for Thanksgiving dinner. I highly recommend you pick up a copy of this book and enjoy it with your pumpkiin pie!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Readable, but not really worthwhile, November 5, 2007
By R. M. Peterson (Santa Fe, NM) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
The novel is set in "Point Royal, Virginia" (is it modelled after Fort Royal?), which apparently is Bausch's stand-in for small-town America, or at least small towns in Eastern United States with relatively affluent and educated folks. It recounts the intertwined lives of a dozen or so of the town's residents over four months leading up to Thanksgiving 1999. The strength of the book is that the story is well told, often with gentle humor (although occasionally with awkward, flat humor). Indeed, in a way Bausch can be commended for making as much as he does -- a readable 400 pages -- out of such meager material. For the weakness of the book lies in the characters. Many of them are far more eccentric than the average small-town resident, several to the point of being bizarre, and except for two or three, they are neither credible nor particularly likeable. (Indeed, the central character, Will Butterfield, is downright pathetic.) Worse, for the most part their lives, thoughts, and preoccupations are too self-absorbed and vapid to be worth the reader's time or interest. Maybe the point is that that is small-town America, but it does not make for engaging or worthwhile literature.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I wanted to like this book, May 17, 2008
By K. L. Cotugno (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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Initially I thought that this would remind me of Richard Russo, whose writings I love. But after slogging through my requisite 100 pages, I found I could not go on. I don't know if the fault lies in the stock situations or characters, but it just seems he takes too many words to say too little.
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2.0 out of 5 stars leftist agenda
why doesn't anyone write good fiction anymore? why is everything I read pushing an anti-Catholic/anti-Christian,pro-socialist ,leftist agenda?? Read more
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