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Hardcover Summer of '42 Book

ISBN: 0399107770

ISBN13: 9780399107771

Summer of '42

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

"​SUMMER OF '42 is a charming and tender novel...The overall effect is one of high hilarity. Raucher is a comic-artist who is able to convey the fears and joys...of the boy and at the same time... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Superbly written and deeply moving

In the summer of my 15th year, I found this book in my father's library. Having no idea what it was about, I started reading it at 2:00 AM. I was immediately sucked into it and did not come up for air for hours. I could not put it down, and finally nodded off in the late morning, only to repeat the process and finish reading it the following day. I was amazed how well the author understood 15 year-old boys. I felt as though he had opened my mind and poured the contents onto paper and had it published. I was stunned by this book. No book had moved me so deeply and profoundly. That summer, I read it over and over and it never got stale. The more I read it, the more deeply it effected me. It was as if I had looked into a mirror that reflected what was deep inside of me and I could never view myself the same way. The plot: A 15 year-old boy, Hermie, spends a summer on an island with his family and two best friends, Oscy and Benjie. Bored by the monotony of the place, the three engage in horseplay and spend most of their time looking for trouble and looking for girls. In the midst of this, a woman, about 7 years Hermie's senior, becomes the object of his adoration. Any further desciption would give away the details that are better read in the book than here. Hermie's romantic idealism of the woman, and his awkwardness in her presence, is so spot on that I doubt it has ever been done better. His friendships with his friends is at once close and antagonistic; friendly and frustrating. They have developed that complex and intimate type of friendship coupled with intense rivalry and antagonism that can only develop over time, and seems to be shared only by teenage boys. Raucher is a superb writer. Not only does he have an uncanny knowledge of the inner workings of the teenage male mind, but his writing style is fluid and supremely easy to read. His use of metaphor is masterly and his ability to provide powerful character sketches with the use of only a few words of description (Hermie's parents, his sister, the girls at the theater, various bit players) reveal his craftsman-like skill with words. No characters, regardless of how minor, are one-dimensional and the reader always sees them exactly as Hermie does. Each minor character--or, rather, Hermie's reaction to each minor character--reveals an aspect of Hermie's personality that allows the reader to know him in a more deeply personal way. It is also surprising that this book runs under 300 pages. Most novelists require far more pages for such thorough character development. Raucher's use of humor is so well developed that I found myself laughing out loud dozens of times. Despite being such a touching and deeply revealing book, it is one of the funniest and most entertaining reads I have enjoyed. But, by the end of the book, I was bawling like a middle-school girl reading a trashy romance novel. This book works so well on so many levels--and has such immense staying power--that it rates five st

Gifted writer tells a classic love story in Summer of '42

Hit movies -- Star Wars, Raiders of the Lost Ark, any of the Star Trek feature films -- are usually adapted into novels, ending up in book shelves and earning additional revenue for the studios that released the film. Often (depending on the writer who does the adaptation from screenplay to novel) the resulting book not only sells well, but takes on a life of its own as a beloved work of fiction.Herman Raucher's adaptation of his screenplay for Robert Mulligan's Summer of '42 is one of those wonderful tie-ins that I, as a reader, hold close to my heart. While Raucher's autobiographical account of Hermie, Oscy, Benjie and, of course, Dorothy is very different in genre from my usual fare of military history non-fiction, Tom Clancy technothrillers, Star Wars-related novels and reference books and things of that nature, the novel does appeal to my sentimental side.And how can it not? Yes, much of the material is taken from the screenplay, and even though Raucher uses third-person narration instead of the movie's first-person voiceovers, it is still full of laughter-inducing memories of the "Terrible Trio" and the description of the three boys' struggles against boredom on Packett Island and their growing interest in sex and women. Mainly, though, the heart of the story is, as in the film, the brief and bittersweet romance between 15-year-old Hermie and 22-year-old Dorothy, the very lovely and very married woman he adores from afar. Raucher is a gifted writer and uses a gentle sense of humor and a fine eye for detail that raises this novelization to a higher level than the usual tie-in. His tone alternates between twinkly-eyed and wry observations about Hermie and his friends to the more introspective and bittersweet recollections of Dorothy."The house? The house was her house. And nothing, from the first moment Hermie saw her, and no one who had ever happened to him since had ever been as frightening and as confusing or could have done more to make him feel more sure, more insecure, more important, and less significant."Although there is a bit of additional material to bookend the movie's events and "That Old Feeling" stands in for Michel Legrand's "The Summer Knows," fans of the original film will not be disappointed by the book, and first-time readers who have not seen Mulligan's 1971 classic will probably want to watch it after reading this superb novel.

Ah! The Bittersweet Memories of First Love

Do you remember what it was like to fall in love for the first time; the feeling you could conquer anything and everything, and the world was yours for the taking? "The Summer of 42" tells of innocence lost and the magic of first love with the beautiful young woman next door. In good fun, Hermie is goaded by his friends to speak to a lonely, attractive woman sitting on a beach. She returns his good-heaarted gestures and a friendship begins. Hermie learns that her husband has goen off to war, and she is staying in a home on the beach. In a night born of a woman's loneliness and and a boy's youthful hormones running amok, Hermie's boyhood innocence is lost forever. He is in awe and wonder of first "real love." As quickly as it begins, the beautiful young lady who captured his heart receives word that her husband has been killed in action. With a brief note, she vanishes from Hermie's life like two ships that pass in the night, never to meet again. As Hermie says, "For everything we take with us, there is something we leave behind." For anyone who remembers, the bittersweet feeling of first love, "The Summer of 42" will touch your heart and reawaken you senses in a way you thought you had long forgotten.

Amazingly beautiful and touching.

I read this book first when I was 16. I had borrowed it from a library and searched for6 years to find it, but in vain. I finally found it here, but it was worth the effort as reading it again brought back a flood of memories. The book is amazingly beautiful and touching and is the only on that succeeds in bringing a tear to my eye.

Hermie, Oscy and Benjy Live On in Summer of '42

This is a great book that was a bestseller when it was first published in the early seventies. It was made into a beautifully evocative movie starring a cast of then newcomers including Jennifer O'Neill, Gary Grimes, Jerry Houser and Oliver Conant. It is a story of coming of age in America's first summer of WW II. The "Terrible Trio" are three fifteen year olds from a Brooklyn neighborhood who spend the "summer of '42" on an island off the coast of Maine. It is about their yearnings, their misadventures, their fumblings with the fairer sex and their own newly discovered physical desires. The three are Hermie, Oscy and Benjie. When you read the book, it is obvious that Hermie is the author, Herman Raucher. While the setting makes the story dated by today's standards, the story line itself is timeless and universal for the simple reason that this is a tale about coming of age. It is the story of Hermie's experiencing that rite of passage that all of us go through at one time or another. But Hermie doesn't experience this summer in a vacuum; along for the ride are Oscy (his best friend) and his next to best friend, Benjie. With the three friends at book's center, Raucher tells hilarious tales of what the boys do to while away the empty hours of summer days in coastal New England. There is the scene where Benjie reveals that he has discovered a "sex manual" and then warns his two buddies not to paw the book because "his mother might check for fingerprints." There is another well written scene where the three desperadoes attempt to pick up dates at the entrance to the local movie theater. Once inside, Hermie tries to "get some" and well......Let's just say the scene is funny in a poignant way. The main object of Hermie's yearnings is a young war bride named Dorothy, whom Hermie sees on the beach one day. She is the most beautiful woman he has ever seen. When I saw the movie in 1971 as a 17 year old college freshman and saw Jennifer O'Neill cast as Hermie's great love, I knew how Herman Raucher must have felt when he lived through his summer of '42. Raucher's description of Dorothy's beauty and innocence (set during a time when her young husband is a young Army Air Corps officer flying over Germany)is beautiful to read. After she meets Hermie and he continues to show up at odd (but somehow convenient) times, Raucher does a wonderful job of describing the budding relationship. There is a wonderful scene where Hermie runs into Dorothy at the market and offers to carry her grocery bags. What he doesn't realize is just how far he will have to carry them. He is a man on a mission but in a teenage boy's body. She is a young bride of 22 and he is smitten with someone too old for him and too married. But Hermie perseveres. Or does he? Hermie's rite of passage comes when he least expects it and it is truly a case of being in the right place at the right time (or wrong place depending on
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