
The End of the Point
A Novel
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Hilary Huber narrates the story of the privileged Porter family and their summers at Ashaunt Point, on Buzzard's Bay, in Massachusetts. The story opens in the summer of 1942 and spans 50 years of change and upheaval in the family and their much loved retreat. Huber delivers the story with an obvious respect for Graver's evocative language and an attachment to the characters and the isolated coast, which is the most prominent and consistent feature in the story. Her pacing, tone, and rhythm engage listeners in the lives of the Porters and their loyal staff as they navigate changes wrought by family and societal dynamics. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine

January 14, 2013
It’s 1942, and the Porters are coming back to Ashaunt, Mass., the piece of the New England coast they’ve always come back to, no matter that the Army is building barracks and viewing platforms there. Graver (Awake) opens her fourth novel with a beautifully evoked glimpse of the very first arrival at Ashaunt—that of the Europeans—and the native people’s eventual sale (or, alternately, “bargain, theft, or gift”) of the land. She then moves omnisciently and believably through the minds of Bea, the Porters’ Scottish nanny, and the wild Helen, the oldest daughter. As 1942 gives way to 1947, 1961, then 1970, and finally 1999, Graver also moves fluidly across time, all on this same beloved piece of land. Bea is a wonderful character, and Graver is incredibly good at evoking past, present, and future, and the ways in which they intersect. Unfortunately, the latter sections of the book, which focus mostly on Helen, no longer a wild girl, and her adult son Charlie, aren’t quite as strong, perhaps because the issues of generational strife, blowback from drug use, and land development are more familiar. That said, Graver’s gifts—her control of time, her ability to evoke place and define character—are immense. Agent: Richard Parks, the Richard Parks Agency.
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