Stern Men

by Elizabeth Gilbert | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 061812733x Global Overview for this book
Registered by editorgrrl of New Haven, Connecticut USA on 11/10/2006
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1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by editorgrrl from New Haven, Connecticut USA on Friday, November 10, 2006
2001 Mariner Books trade paperback (first edition; 3rd printing) bought at the thrift store -- just because I liked the cover. Too bad it's a little too late in the season for a themed release.

From Publishers Weekly
Set on two fictitious islands in northern Maine during the 1970s, this first novel by the author of a sparkling story collection, Pilgrims, begins slowly but warms up with smart, sassy humor. Isolated from the mainland by 20 miles of sea, but separated from each other only by a small channel, the islands of Fort Niles and Courne Haven should be natural allies, sharing the local lobster industry. Instead, the two communities are old enemies, torn apart by centuries of hostile, occasionally violent competition among their territorial lobstermen. Ruth Thomas, daughter of one of Fort Niles's most cutthroat lobstermen, has returned home after four years at a private girls' school, determined both to resist her rich grandfather's plans to send her to college and to find her place among the island's rough-spoken personalities. Both propositions prove more difficult than the headstrong romantic expects. As Gilbert charts Ruth's attempts to decide her future, she introduces a strong dose of lobster lore and a large cast of sly villains and oddball characters. Her prose is as light-hearted and amusing as ever, though some narrative twists lack the emotional resonance of her previous work and several characters seem hemmed in as caricatures. Ruth's meeting with her estranged mother is smoothed over in an anticlimactic fashion, blunting the power of the scene, and her offbeat coming-of-age story gets going only a third of the way through the book. Nonetheless, Gilbert's comic timing grows sharper in the second half, and her gift for lively, authentic dialogue and atmospheric settings continually lights up this entertaining, and surprisingly thought-provoking, romp.

From Kirkus Reviews
A sly picaresque about a young woman who single-handedly ends a generations-long feud between two remote islands off the coast of Maine. Ruth Thomas's parents -- her lobsterman father and New England sort-of aristocrat mother -- separated when she was a child. Largely ignored but adored by her gruff father, Ruth is sent off to boarding school, but she still spends her summers and vacations happily adrift among the oddball characters of Fort Niles Island. She virtually lives with her neighbor -- sa widow with five inbred sons -- and cusses as heatedly and colorfully as the most ruthless lobstermen (whom she alone seems able to befriend). But Ruth is not just your run-of-the-mill tomboy: she also has strong ties to her mother, who lives as a glorified maid/half-sister in the wealthy and powerful Ellis family, and Ruth thus has the typical (if slightly more hard-boiled) romantic yearnings of every teenage girl. Part offbeat social history of lobstermen and their environment and part -- yes -- love story, Gilbert's debut (after a particularly arresting set of stories called Pilgrims, 1997) is a surprisingly satisfying combination of ideas: that a young woman can be tough and still be a girl, that even in a masculine culture, a smart and crafty woman can take charge and end decades of feuding, that sleeping with the enemy can be a good idea. There's romance here, but little sentimentality and, mercifully (considering that this is a first novel by a young urban woman), no trendy psychologizing. In fact, while the story is more or less contemporary, it has the time-out-of-time quality typical of the best fiction -- and it has a heroine who owes more to Voltaire than to Helen Fielding. Sophisticated yet ribald, comic yet serious: an exceptional debut from a writer to watch.

Released 17 yrs ago (11/18/2006 UTC) at Surf Bar, 139 N. 6th St. (btwn. Bedford & Berry) in Brooklyn, New York USA

WILD RELEASE NOTES:

RELEASE NOTES:

Released at 9:45 p.m. in front of:

Surf Bar
139 North 6th Street (near Bedford Avenue)
Brooklyn, New York, USA

There's a lobster on the front of this book, so I thought the Surf Bar'd be a good fit. The sign is a beatup old surfboard, and there's a big neon "seafood" sign. Plus, there was a steaming pot out front labeled "chowda."

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