Selected Book
Empire Falls
- Paperback
- Edition: 2 Sub
- Author: Richard Russo
- Publisher: Vintage
- Release Date: April 2002
- ISBN-10: 0375726403
- ISBN-13: 9780375726408
- List Price: $46.95
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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon
SummaryLike most of Richard Russo's earlier novels, Empire Falls is a tale of blue-collar life, which itself increasingly resembles a kind of high-wire act performed without the benefit of any middle-class safety nets. This time, though, the author has widened his scope, producing a comic and compelling ensemble piece. There is, to be sure, a protagonist: fortysomething Miles Roby, proprietor of the local greasy spoon and the recently divorced father of a teenage daughter. But Russo sets in motion a large cast of secondary characters, drawn from every social stratum of his depressed New England mill town. We meet his ex-wife Janine, his father Max (another of Russo's cantankerous layabouts), and a host of Empire Grill regulars. We're also introduced to Francine Whiting, a manipulative widow who owns half the town--and who takes a perverse pleasure in pointing out Miles's psychological defects. Miles does indeed have a tendency to take it on the chin. (At one point he alludes to his own "natural propensity for shit-eating.") And his role as Mr. Nice Guy thrusts him into all sorts of clashes with his not-so-nice contemporaries, even as the reader patiently waits for him to blow his top. It would be impossible to summarize Russo's multiple plot lines here. Suffice it to say that he touches on love and marriage, lust and loss and small-town economics, with more than a soupçon of class resentment stirred into the broth. This is, in a sense, an epic of small and large frustrations: "After all, what was the whole wide world but a place for people to yearn for their heart's impossible desires, for those desires to become entrenched in defiance of logic, plausibility, and even the passage of time, as eternal as polished marble." Yet Russo's comedic timing keeps the novel from collapsing into an orgy of breast-beating, and his dialogue alone--snappy and natural and efficiently poignant--is sufficient cause to put Empire Falls on the map. --Bob Brandeis |
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
Good, captivating read.
Richard Russo's Empire Falls was an engrossing, if not enjoyable read.
Part of my interest was undoubtedly because I once lived in Maine, where the story is set. Maine is a unique place, and Russo nails its forlorn atmosphere. The story simmers all the more for having this cold, economically depressed environment as its backdrop. If you've spent time there, the book will transport you back.
But I recommend Empire Falls most of all because it captures a certain texture of the relationships between family members. The responsibilities that exist between parent and child, child and parent are laid bare in subtle twists of the lead characters' lives. There is also tremendous drama in the story, but that drama serves mostly to support the character development that is the centerpiece of the book.
Disappointed in this book.
I was so looking forward to reading a Richard Russo book. I had heard great things about him from friends about his other books like the "Bridge of Sighs," "Straight Man" and "Nobody's Fool." Many here have written he is quick-witted while effortlessly making a great turn of the phrase with several meanings behind it.
Well, unfortunately, I didn't get that from his so-called Pulitzer Prize winning book, "Empire Falls." First of all, the lead character Miles wasn't compelling at all. I never felt comfortable with him and I wasn't sure what Russo was trying to do. Was I to feel sorry for Miles, or was I so feel contempt for a man, who though good, was a mamby-pamby.
And although Russo chose to write the book in third person, Russo wasn't sure if it should be third person limited or omniscient. What I mean by this is that on one hand we as readers learned about the characters and let them have us understand what they were feeling and thinking (limited third person). On the other hand, Russo decided to inject his personal philosophical views projected through the characters in awkward places, mainly coming from Miles or Tick and even to a lesser extent Janine.
I can usually read a 470+ page book in a week, but this book took me seven weeks to finish, because it just wasn't interesting enough. The plot was not existent and did not come together until late in Part Four. Then I felt it was a rush to the finish line to tie up all the preposterous lose ends between Miles, Charlie Mayne (Whiting), his mother Grace, John Voss, Mrs. Whiting, Cindy Whiting and even Max.
In sum, I found this book very disappointing. I gave it 3 stars, but really wanted to give it 2.5 stars. I think 2 stars would have been too harsh, because Russo is a fine writer, but I just don't get what the Pulitzer committee saw in this book except for a variation on school violence (done better in many other books) and a small town environment (done MUCH better by Annie Proulx and John Yates) of a crumbling North East town and the hanger-ons just trying to make sense of their existence; thus the double entendre of "EMPIRE FALLS." It just didn't do it for me.
Disappointing, to Say the Least
Russo easily manages the difficult task of creating a town and populating it with "real" people, but he does the narrative a tremendous disservice with a major rote story line. The introduction of an abused teenager who goes on to kill a classmate, a teacher and the principal betrays the novel. Not only does it reflect a lack of imagination, but it fails to move the characters along the natural line of progression Russo had outlined until that point. If deus ex machina is your thing, you may not find this twist disruptive. I would have preferred the characters to find redemption or falter just short of it through their own actions rather than find the 460+ pages that preceded this shift were read in vain.
Note: Russo needed a mechanism to get his protagonist Miles to Martha's Vineyard so that he could he could have his epiphany. I suppose a psychopathic teenager is an easy way to create that path, but that isn't the one I expect from a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.
Two stars given only because of the quality of the writing and the depth of exploration of the relationships we have with ourselves, our family and friends, the towns in which we live and, critically, expectations -- those we have for ourselves and that others have for us.
Thoughtful
On the surface this is a book about an average guy who is stuck in a rut in an average small town. But when you delve deeper, you see that the book is about how pivotal choices and events shape who we are and where we end up in life. The characters in this book are memorable, realistic, and well developed. They are masterfully woven together to create an engaging story. However, the story moves slowly because there are a lot of necessary details to the story. I would not recommend this book to anyone looking for a quick, entertaining read that requires no thought. Much like real life, some parts of the story were humorous while others were tragic and sad.
Readable
Life in a derelict New England milltown. Readable? Yes, but not mesmerizing. Hard to argue with the Pulitzer Prize, but, frankly, the characters were weak-kneed and not particularly likeable; kept hoping someone would show a little spunk but it didn't happen.