hwaicon.blogg.se

The dutch house ann patchett
The dutch house ann patchett




The book went in many different directions after that. It’s funny to me when people say my work isn’t political because everything feels political to me these days.

the dutch house ann patchett

I wanted a book about someone who didn’t want to be rich. The other thing was the presidential election, and what felt like a celebration of extreme wealth. (For a free preview, read the first 12 pages of the book here. In Patchett’s elegant prose, these characters come to life and The Dutch House becomes an immersive, unforgettable reading experience-a book that deserves to be savored, page by page. The next four decades reveal how Maeve and Danny are shaped by the absence of their mother and the loving presence of one another, and how each fares differently in the wake of their childhood loss.

the dutch house ann patchett

His beloved big sister was already the center of Danny’s universe, but as they enter adolescence, Maeve becomes his surrogate caretaker, too.

the dutch house ann patchett

It’s only a few years until Cyril remarries, bringing into the family a stepmother, Andrea, who also comes with two girls of her own (and has no interest in parenting four children). But when Danny is three and Maeve is ten, Elna leaves, abandoning her children to Cyril’s care for reasons they don’t understand. Without spoiling too many twists and turns, here’s a brief overview of who’s who:ĭanny Conroy and his sister Maeve spend their early years in a Philadelphia mansion that was a gift from their father, Cyril, to their mother, Elna. The Dutch House, which follows one fractured family over several decades as the years pile on both joy and heartbreak, is a testament to sibling bonds as well as a meditation on familial responsibility.

the dutch house ann patchett

Here at Parnassus, booksellers have passed around an early copy of Ann Patchett’s eighth novel so many times it’s starting to fall apart, which tells you something about how excited we are to hold the real thing in our hands at last.






The dutch house ann patchett