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Paperback A Stone Boat Book

ISBN: 0452274982

ISBN13: 9780452274983

A Stone Boat

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

The debut novel, first published over twenty years ago, from the National Book Award-winning author of The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression and Far from the Tree: Parents, Children, and the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Solomon misses the mark.

The writing is often tedious. The main character, Harry, is a pathetic figure and in no way representative of gay men. Solomon is obviously uninformed about gays and their joys and sorrows. I think this book stinks. I have yet to figure out the relevance of the book title.

All about his mother

At first I was somehow a bit afraid to read this book, a novel about your dying mother. But I said to myself, come on and face it, its a part of growing up. So I started reading and got aquainted with this New York based cosmopolitan family. I think the first person narrator, a young and promising pianist, was not intriguing. This was kind of odd to me as I expected him to puzzle me. However, the very minute his mother begins to speak you know she is the one who carries the power in this book. Few books have presented such a strong mother figure as here allthough she stays at the background. Mother is very stylish, beautiful, educated and verbally gifted. She can turn anyting into a succes by knowing what to say, what to wear, which flowers to use, what kind of music to play, where to socialize, you name it and she is the star of the evening. She reminded me on Jackie Kennedy. While the son is searching for a relationship and a place to live, mother is actually ready with her life and saying goodbye to it all because she suffers from cancer. As her body is fainting, her mind stays sharp as a knife untill the very last minutes when she gives a shivering speach. Before this happens, mother disapproves her sons' gay lifestyle which becomes the centre of the struggle between them. The young man almost gives up reaching his mother. The fighting with her harms him and there seems no solution...

A FAN LETTER

Dear Andrew Solomon, This is a fan letter: PLEASE keep writing such beautiful fiction. PLEASE write another novel as soon as possible. I have never come across Solomon's prose in "The New Yorker" and have not read his two non-fiction books, one about artists in the Soviet Union and one about Depression. A STONE BOAT is his first novel. It was a birthday gift to me and I read it in three days. I then waited one day and read it all over again. It is one of the most elegantly written novels I've ever read: Solomon chooses words as if they were precious jewels and then sets them perfectly. And yet, the reader is never conscious of the author, as Armistead Maupin says, "using a ten dollar word when a ten cent word will do." A STONE BOAT tells of a gifted classical pianist, Harry, at the beginning of what will no doubt be a major career. An American living in London, Harry joins his privileged family for what is supposed to be a joyous holiday in France. But it is here that they learn that Harry's mother has cancer. This tragedy is the centerpiece of the narrative, but it is the lives that touch Harry's and his mother's that make the book even more fascinating and complex, funny, charming and, above all, achingly beautiful. The novel is not packed with scores of characters. Rather it is an intimate story of a family and the few who are their satellites: from Harry's good-hearted, passive, British male lover to his wise and strong American girlfriend, from his unforgiving, tough-minded agent to his hedonistic sex partner, Nick. It is, in the end, a story of life conquering death, of a family bonding at first to refuse Death admittance to their home and then, finally, conspiring to help one of their own die, in her own way and time by her own hand with dignity and grace. This is a once-in-a-lifetime read: a novel to cherish. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

Wonderful novel

This is a very touching and wonderfully written novel. Every scene in it has the feel of authenticity. Highly recommended for readers willing to let themselves be moved emotionally by powerful prose.

An amazingly articulate and moving novel...a must-read!

Andrew Solomon's "A Stone Boat" is a remarkable first novel. The author's mastery of the English language and the way he uses it to create senses of setting and character are incredible. There is much to admire, too, in Mr. Solomon's way with a story. His characters are real as are their relationships. Harry, the main charactor/narrator, describes his mother upon first sight in the most extraordinary way - close your eyes and you see her sitting across the room. This passage is one to read and re-read all the while savoring the beauty of the language and the sheer descriptive powers of the author. Do not lend this book to your friends or you will never see it again - the prose is that remarkable. One hopes Mr. Solomon is working on his second, third and fourth books as this review is being written.

A good, sad book

It really will make you cry. This book is wrenching and naked. The author is unburdened of any shame or guilt and with these things actually driving him, his guts spill onto the page for us to read like tea leaves.
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