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Hardcover The Suburbs of Heaven Book

ISBN: 1569471827

ISBN13: 9781569471821

The Suburbs of Heaven

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

What would drive easy-going, likable Jim Hutchins to pick up a twelve-gauge and head for his sworn enemy? The IRS threatening to garnish his mechanic's wages? His kids providing the police department... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

This is New Hampshire?

Speak of a dysfunctional family. Wow! Meet Jim and Pauline Hutchins and their children, nephews and assorted other relatives. They find trouble where was none before. And when you think nothing else could possibly go wrong, another can of worms open up. The Book of Job is a children's tale by comparison. All this gets to the point where, unfortunately, it becomes very funny. It sounds like a story out of some Kentucky holler and not like prim, staid and silent New England. I very much admire the author for his incredible gift of imagination. He wrote a wonderful book.

Hard Life in New Hampshire

Merle Drown has written a sad, poignant yet engaging novel about a family's hard life and downward spiral in rural New Hampshire. The story of the day to day misery of the Hutchins family, as life's troubles bear down on them, should make you want to put the book down and say "forget it, enough already". But this book is written with such insight, humor and hope that you'll keep turning pages to the end. The novel is told from the different viewpoints of the five Hutchins family members. Each adds his or her feelings of past and current events, moving the story foward to its climactic ending. The real strength of this book is the amazing character development and eloquent writing. Mr. Drown has a wonderful ear for dialogue. A book about despair and the beaten down lives of a rural family and yet, uplifting in its own way.

An authentic piece of work from Drown

I often get the impression that authors of character driven stories about poor, and consequently dysfunctional, families write from the comfort of their Soho lofts. Having first-hand experience at being down-and-out, I can say that Drown appears to really get it. The Hutchins' are good folks who can't seem to get a break. Worse, most of the people around them don't offer any breaks. Yet they manage to laugh (occassionally anyway) through it. So, even if Drown doesn't "get it," he does a great job of faking it. And isn't that what its all about?

Merle Drown tells it like it is!

This man certainly is the Faulkner of N.H.! Indeed. If I were to reccomend this book to anyone, it would be someone from New Hampshire. Having lived in the state that lives free or dies, I can easily see why Jim would do what he does, says what he says. The chapters are wonderfully short and blissful. Panty thieves beware! Funny, sad, dark, angry...Congratulations on that NEA grant, Merle! (all this and the man is a fine high school english teacher? wow.)

Earthy and darkly funny

Merle Drown's powerful rural voice is both authentically simple and poetically lyrical. When we meet protagonist Jim Hutchins he is 50, lugging a shotgun from his trailer, preparing to kill his brother-in-law Emory, his "sworn enemy," (a phrase we later learn is wryly borrowed from his tormented eldest son) and ruminating how things got to this pass."Life makes you eat the thorns. Smell the roses if you can, but don't forget, you're going to eat the thorns. Course I ain't so smart. If I were smart, I'd have hunted up a pistol, then my elbow wouldn't hurt so."Born and bred in Penacook County, NH, Hutchins quit school in the eighth grade, married his sweetheart, Pauline, and had four children. Three of them seem to be making worse messes of their lives than their parents and the fourth, the youngest, their shining hope, Elizabeth, died two years before at age 11 in an inexplicable drowning accident which has fragmented the family.Bereft of hope, communication among them breaks down and each falls prey to his or her core weakness. Slow, steady Gregory, the oldest, becomes consumed by the voices in his head and the oddly prescient voices coming over his radio. Lisa escapes her abusive marriage after three children only to succumb to drugs and alcohol and prostitution. Tommy, the smartest, seems bent on drinking himself to destruction. Pauline clings mightily to each of her children, blaming others for their troubles.Jim's grief is internal and inarticulate. Helplessly he watches Pauline turn to Emory for comfort and for money when she's spent all that they have and owe to buy her children out of the holes they've dug themselves. Dunned for back taxes by the IRS and the town, he seems unable to act, except to keep things from falling completely apart. It's Jim who fetches Lisa from her feckless, mean husband ("He claims Fesmire for a name, though I ain't uncertain that a while back in his family a turnip got over the fence"), Jim who keeps Tommy from dropping his hard-mouthed girlfriend out a second-story window, and Jim who takes the gun away from Gregory. But he is limited to reactions and when it comes to Pauline he's helpless.While Jim's is the main voice, Drown allows each of the Hutchinses to speak. Characters who might otherwise seem people only a parent could love come into their own with humor and passion. Tommy hides his regrets under a breathless, edgy sass and more hell-bent energy than is healthy. Gregory works things out with a meticulous if loony and increasingly frightening earnestness. Lisa, the least comprehensible and least sympathetic, combines self-loathing with bitterness and bursts of rough independence and Pauline's grief and yearning for beauty infuse her every deed.Violence lurks at the edges. Suplots include a panty thief and Emory's real estate maneuvering, impotence and police suspicions of having murdered his wife (Jim's sister).Told in the present tense, the story unfurls the convol
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