
Ultraviolet
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

July 1, 2018
Three generations of women seek to forge independent identities while struggling to understand their roles in this book about mothers and daughters, marriage, education, and risk.Matson (The Tree-Sitter, 2006) writes vignettelike chapters that detail a sweeping family history beginning in 1930s India, where Elsie is married to J.N., a strict Mennonite missionary. "India keeps reducing [Elsie] to a person who knows nothing," but her daughter, Kathryn, questions the world directly and moves through it fluidly. While Elsie averts her eyes from uncertainty and a world that seems to belong to men, Kathryn is curious and engaged. Unfortunately, Elsie dies early, of a stroke. Kathryn, upon returning to the United States, feels detached from her family, education, and culture: "The gulf between India and America was so wide she could scarcely see past it." She feels like "a person awkwardly between worlds--India and Illinois, Mennonite and modern," and so she strikes out on her own for Oregon. She meets Carl, a confident stranger who promises to be the antithesis to everything she's lived before. Unfortunately, Carl harbors some secrets. "All [Kathryn] wants," though, "is that simple feeling of belonging." They marry and have children, but their marriage begins to crumble under the weight of those secrets. Matson returns to the push and pull of safety versus desire. It is Kathryn's daughter, Samantha, whose life becomes about both taking risk and keeping the family together in a meaningful way. Matson's chapters, each of which jumps forward in time, conclude with an especially poignant reflection on aging, as Samantha cares for her dying mother in her final days.This is a stoic view of mother-daughter love: an unsentimental reflection on both the tribulations and the importance of filial connection.
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Starred review from July 16, 2018
Matson (The Tree-Sitter) follows the disappointments and dilemmas of the women of one family across 80 years in this fascinating and stirring novel. Born in 1930s India, Kathryn sloughs off her austere Mennonite missionary upbringing after returning to America. Kathryn moves to Portland, Ore., and dates a string of servicemen until she meets Carl, a former communist sheet metal worker who’s 16 years older than her. She follows him to a temporary work assignment in Los Angeles, where they marry. After returning to Portland, Kathryn struggles with miscarriages; Carl’s sprawling, Finnish-speaking family; and Carl’s irregular work. Kathryn’s second child, Samantha, grows up amid her mother’s curdling resentment and is forced to care for her elderly father after her parents’ long-postponed divorce. Matson glides through her characters’ lives in almost self-contained chapters punctuated by explosions of burnished emotion: the quick fracturing of a family sledding trip, the casual cruelty of a spoiled neighbor girl, the awkwardness of a mother-daughter trip to Vegas. History minimally intrudes and is generally used to heighten sentiments, such as the Black Dahlia case, which serves to highlight Kathryn’s vulnerability, and a Vietnam War protest that captures Samantha’s shaky coming-of-age. Readers will latch onto the unforgettable characters of this accomplished saga of the shifting personal and historical complications of American womanhood. Agent: Emily Forland, Brandt & Hotchman Literary Agents.

September 1, 2018
From one family comes a tale of three women as they deal with the trials and tribulations of domestic life. Elsie lives in 1930s India with her missionary husband, whose priorities are clearly with his life's work rather than with his family. Their daughter Kathryn arrives in the United States as a young woman during World War II and finds her way to Oregon, eager to start a new life. She marries the seemingly good-natured Carl, but after two children and many years of financial struggle, their relationship falls apart. Shift to their daughter Samantha, who comes of age in the 1970s as societal norms are imploding. In the end, it's Samantha who helps both her father and her mother navigate their end-of-life journeys. Their lives can be viewed as a time line of women's roles in American life, with matriarch Elsie passively subversive, Kathryn rebelling against her constraints, and Samantha possessing the freedom of self-determination. VERDICT While this new work from the author of The Tree-Sitter is slow moving, each chapter serves as an in-depth "snapshot," leaving it up to readers to extract meaning and put it all together. Readers of Elizabeth Strout may want to take a look.--Susanne Wells, Indianapolis P.L.
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

August 1, 2018
When Kathryn loses her mother, Elsie, unexpectedly, she picks up and moves to Portland, Oregon, in 1947. After spending her childhood in India with fellow Mennonites, Kathryn never felt at home in the Midwest. Jobs aren't terribly plentiful, and Kathryn's grateful for work waitressing at a Portland diner. Soon repeat-customer Carl proposes, and they make their way to sunny, smoggy Los Angeles. Carl is a busy construction worker 16 years Kathryn's senior, and it's not long before she feels uneasy in Los Angeles and in her marriage. Their daughter, Samantha, picks up on the tension between her parents and vows to live a more thoughtful and independent life. When adult Samantha moves to Boston, she realizes that the ties binding her to Kathryn and Elsie are stronger than she imagined. Through the strengths and vulnerabilities of these three very different women, Matson (The Tree-Sitter?, 2006) explores the motivations behind motherhood, matrimony, and career ambitions. Fans of Anne Tyler and Geraldine Brooks will enjoy the intertwined, intergenerational narratives; historical details; and emotional depth of this engrossing novel.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
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