Evening (Vintage Contemporaries) (Vintage Contemporaries)

by Vintage

$13.95
buy from amazon.com
Average Rating: * * * half star -
Sales Rank:50795 (lower is better)
Price Used:$0.01
Shipping:Free Shipping on most orders over $25*
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
Release Date:2007-05-01
Label:Vintage
Pages:288
Binding:Paperback
Publication Date:2007-05-01
Published By:Vintage
ASIN:0307387127
Category:Book

Authors

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Product Description

A NEW YORK TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

July 1954. An island off the coast of Maine. Ann Grant—a 25-year-old New York career girl—is a bridesmaid at her best friend's lavish wedding. Also present is a man named Harris Arden, whom Ann has never met . . .

After three marriages and five children, Ann Lord lies in an upstairs bedroom of a house in Cambridge, Massachusetts. What comes to her, eclipsing a stream of doctor's visits and friends stopping by and grown children overheard whispering from the next room, is a rush of memories from a weekend 40 years ago in Maine, when she fell in love with a passion that even now throws a shadow onto the rest of her life. In Evening, Susan Minot gives us a novel of spellbinding power on the nature of memory and love.
Amazon.com Review

As Ann Lord lies on her deathbed, her daughter delivers a balsam pillow from the attic. At first the ailing woman is confused, but suddenly the scent reminds her of the "wild tumult" she experienced 40 years earlier:
Something stole into her as she walked in the dark, a dream she'd had long ago. The air was so black she was unable to see her arms, it was a warm summer night. Above her she could make out the dark line of the tops of spruce trees and a sky lit with stars. She felt the warm tar through the soles of her shoes. The boy beside her took her hand.
In the porous world between conscious and unconscious the protagonist of Evening revisits the great passions of her life, along with its considerable disappointments. The boy in the dark remains the fixed point--not so much because he is the most important man in her life, but because of the untapped possibilities he represents. Meanwhile, friends and relations come to sit by Ann Lord's side as she veers between clarity and feverish recollection.

In her third novel, Susan Minot takes some new risks--her narrative spanning seven decades of memory and her style ranging from Stegneresque particularity to the exquisite abstraction Virginia Woolf perfected in To the Lighthouse. Equal parts memory and desire, fiction and poetry, Evening is a seductive story made more so by the measured pace of details emerging, one by one, like stars. --Cristina Del Sesto

Customer Reviews

Whatever We May Think of at the End of Life - Reviewed on 2008-10-12
* * * *

This was truly a striking story. I didn't like it much at first, but as I continued reading I saw there was something beautiful being realized. I had a good feeling after I finished reading it - I enjoyed the story and admire Susan Minot's confidence to write a novel in this way - her loose, rambling style captured the subconscious mind.

It's true that this is a sprawling story which was sometimes hard to follow but I think that often, that's the way memories get tangled up at the end of life after an illness. It gives the reader an inside view of dying, which is very thought-provoking. I'm intrigued to see the movie and to see how their treatment affects the plot and storyline.
Stunk it up - Reviewed on 2008-10-05
*

The ending in the book was very disappointing. The chapters rambled on, the character is confused by medication. I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone. I'm gonna try to sell it on the bulletin board at work. I'm not even putting it back on my bookshelf!
A subject for a novel and for a film - Reviewed on 2008-07-05
* * * *
1 customer found this review helpful.

Evening is a wanderful book about the love, the time and the memory. I have seen the film and after I have read the book: there is a complete corrispondence bethween them: I suggest to read it to all interested on human feelings.
Florindo Pirone
Flowing and literary - Reviewed on 2008-05-19
* * * *
1 customer found this review helpful.

Beautiful writing. A fluid stream of consciousness. Memories of momentous and fleeting love. Haunting.
Disjointed and confusing - Reviewed on 2008-04-13
* *
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
While the premise of this story is intriguing, the style with which it is written left me cold. It was too confusing trying to figure out the husbands, boyfriends and children. And it is too predictable in the chain of events.
Linda C. Wright
Author, One Clown Short
One Clown Short
Read More Customer Reviews »
Go To Amazon Product Page

* - See Amazon Product Page for shipping and pricing details.


Book Subjects