Queen Esther, by John Irving

(Simon & Schuster, 408 pages)

Esther was 3 years old, almost 4, when she was left outside a Maine orphanage, where the staff found her angrily kicking the door. “Esther doesn’t cry — she just gets angry,” it is later said of the child.

The toddler had a well-developed vocabulary and had memorized passages from the Book of Esther of the Bible. She knew she was Jewish. But it would be years before anyone would learn that she was born in Vienna and came to the U.S. with her parents, both now dead.

The orphanage where tough little Esther is left, St. Cloud’s, is well-known to those familiar with The Cider House Rules, the John Irving novel that later became a film for which Irving won the Oscar for best adapted screenplay 25 years ago. Queen Esther is not a sequel, although its themes will be familiar to Irving fans — perhaps wearily so.

Esther will live at St. Cloud’s for a decade until she is offered a job — and a home — with Thomas and Constance Winslow, residents of Pennacook, New Hampshire, and the parents of four daughters named after the virtues: Faith, Hope, Prudence and Honor.

Like Dr. William Larch, the physician who runs the orphanage (played by Michael Caine in the Cider House movie), the Winslows are not fans of religion or the concept of God. They are ideologically at odds with the pearl-clutching “townspeople of Pennacook,” despite Thomas Winslow’s best efforts to open their minds at “Town Talks” where he endeavors to instruct them about the great books and convince them that morality is not the equivalent of conventionality.

Thomas Winslow is comically opposed to anything related to Maine; at one point, his wife thinks “Oh, Tommy, please give up the grudge you have against Maine!” But the couple need a new au pair to care for their youngest child, Honor, and they have run out of options elsewhere. So they travel to St. Cloud’s and adopt Esther despite the objections of people shocked that they would want “the Jewish one.”

It’s a good match, for the child and the couple. Like Esther, the Winslows are prodigious readers (which gives Irving a chance to proselytize his most favored 19th-century authors through his characters, as is his habit), and they are taking in a young woman who intends to get a tattoo that is a quote from Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre: “I care for myself. The more solitary, the more friendless, the more unsustained I am, the more I will respect myself.”

The quote permeates the novel, even as Irving wrests the focus from Thomas and Constance Winslow, to Esther Nacht, to Jimmy Winslow, the child that Esther ultimately gives birth to and gives to Honor to raise, in accordance with a pact they have made.

The journey is winding, complex and transcontinental. Esther goes off to Israel to fulfill what she sees as her life’s purpose, and the child she conceived, Jimmy Winslow, grows up and becomes a father and a writer and tries to sort out his complicated roots, insisting all his life that he is “just a New Hampshire boy,” although in reality he is not a Pennacook townie and never will be.

This is ironic, since the Winslow line was genealogical royalty in America; the ancestors of both Thomas and Constance sailed on the Mayflower, and, as Irving writes, “If you grew up in Pennacook, in southeastern New Hampshire, in the 1940s and 1950s, where you came from mattered.” But so did adherence to a certain set of standards that didn’t include unconventional families and overlooked far more grievous sins. And Jimmy’s conundrum is that he isn’t really a Winslow by blood and doesn’t identify as Jewish; despite being ardently loved by people on multiple continents, he is not really sure who he is.

Irving is a master at character development, and 100 pages in, I was so invested in the lives of Thomas and Constance Winslow that I was reluctant to leave their world to delve into Esther’s, and Jimmy’s. Nor was I prepared for the degree of preaching to which I would be subjected about social and international issues.

Indeed, it is Irving’s preaching that is an obstacle to be overcome in enjoying this novel. As evidenced here and throughout his body of work, he has strong opinions on reproductive choice, on non-traditional families and on religion, opinions which he intends to inculcate into his readers with all the subtlety of a hammer. Even as Irving riffs on the pious townspeople of Pennacook for their moralizing, he moralizes with the same unyielding zeal, denying the microphone to any timid nuance that might want to offer an opposing view. This belligerent approach at times comes off as a grudge.

In one scene, Jimmy visits what is believed to be the tomb of Jesus Christ at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and observes a weeping man who leaves the cave, “his face streaked with tears, his smile radiant.”

“Jesus touched me — I felt him touch me!” the lunatic Christian cried,” Irving writes, and in the insertion of the word “lunatic,” we feel the full force of those who harbor animosity toward religion and believe its ills outweigh its good, even though it later becomes apparent that the man had been touched by a cat, and not a deity.

Irving once told an interviewer that he believes “it’s vain and presumptuous to presume that what you believe, everyone else should also believe. …. In other words, people who are so convinced of their religions that they proselytize it to others, I find very tiresome.”

It’s unclear if Irving is aware of how much he proselytizes to others of his own values and beliefs. Nonetheless, he is, like Jimmy Winslow, “a New Hampshire boy” and one of New England’s most important contemporary writers. If some parts of Queen Esther feel like reconstituted sermons from The Cider House Rules or The World According to Garp, this does not preclude the reader taking pleasure in the world of the Winslows.

But offer thoughts and prayers for the poor. maligned, monocultural “townspeople of Pennacook” — not to be mistaken with the good people of the village of Penacook in Concord — as you read. B

Featured Photo: Queen Esther

The local shelf

Books from local authors

Want to add to a friend’s book collection? Here are some recent releases from local authors. Look for them at your favorite bookstore.

The True and Lucky Life of a Turtle,written by Sy Montgomery and illustrated by Matt Patterson, is the story of a real-life 42-pound snapping turtle named Fire Chief. Montgomery has written many other books about animals, including some for adults and other picture books illustrated by Patterson. Kirkus Reviews named this 40-page hardcover one of the Best Picture Books of 2025 for Animal Lovers.

Frankie the Ghost Train, written by LaBelle Winery co-owner Cesar Arboleda, “is a heartwarming tale of a quiet boy, a mysterious train, and the power of imagination,” according to the book’s description on LaBelle’s website. “Set in the forgotten corners of Milltown, this story reminds readers young and old that sometimes the places we stumble upon are the ones that shape us the most.” About the author, the website says this: “Cesar Arboleda immigrated as a young boy from Colombia, South America, to Lowell, Massachusetts. He is a proud American citizen, a storyteller, dreamer, husband, father, and lifelong believer in the quiet magic found in unexpected places.” This 40-page hardcover children’s book is available for $20 at labellewinery.com/shop.frankie-the-ghost-train-book-by-cesar-arboleda.

The Shopkeeper of Alsace is the debut novel from former NHPR host Laura Knoy. It’s based on a true story and “brings to life a little-known corner of wartime history — and an inspiring real-life heroine you’ll cheer for,” says the book description at lauraknoy.com. Visit the website to read about the background behind the book and to order a copy. (Michael Witthaus talked to Knoy about the book; see the story in the Nov. 6 Hippo on page 14. Find the issue in the digital library at hippopress.com.)

A Better Loser is a collection of short stories set in southern New Hampshire, written by Manchester resident and high school teacher Nate Graziano. “Whether facing romantic troubles, addiction, or struggling to rein in their passions, these characters will not allow their failures to define them — instead, they become ‘better losers,’” according to the author’s website, nathangraziano.com, which has links for purchasing the book.

Grenier Air Base: A Beacon on the Home Front, by Leah Dearborn, is “a non-fiction military history of a vanished air base,” says the author’s website, leahmdearborn.com. Dearborn is associate director of the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire; the book is available at the Museum’s website, aviationmuseumofnh.org/shop, where it goes for $35. The author’s website says a portion of all proceeds goes to AMNH programming.

The Weight of Snow and Regret, by Elizabeth Gauffreau, is a novel that “tells the story of the closure of the last poor farm in Vermont in 1968,” according to a press release from Paul Stream Press. “The Weight of Snow and Regret tells the poignant story of what it means to care for others in a rapidly changing world.” Gauffreau grew up in Vermont and lives in Nottingham, New Hampshire.

The Gospel According to Jack: Tracking Kerouac In My Life is written by Rev. Steve Edington, a retired Unitarian Universalist minister and Minister Emeritus of the UU Church of Nashua. “Through meditations on Kerouac’s life, art and restless searching, Edington weaves together literary reflection and personal journey. The Gospel According to Jack offers an uplifting and wise exploration of faith, creativity, and what it means to seek meaning in a vast, mysterious universe,” said the website for Balin Books in Nashua (balinebooks.com), where Edington will discuss the book on Saturday, Jan. 10.

Courtship in Purgatory, by Robert Perreault, is described as “an intimate look at the difficulties faced by two middle-aged lovers” and “a sincere look back at family and Franco-American traditional attitudes and constraints following World War II.” Perreault is a bilingual writer of books and articles about the New England Franco-American experience and the history of his hometown, Manchester. This is his first novel in English. He holds a B.A. in Sociology from Saint Anselm College (1972), including a year of study in Paris; an M.A. in French/New England Franco-American Studies from Rhode Island College, and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing (Fiction/Nonfiction) from Southern New Hampshire University, according to a press release, and Manchester’s Franco-American Centre proclaimed him Franco-American of the Year in 2012.

Perfidy: The Silver River Series 2, by Emily Siems, is the second book in a planned romantasy trilogy. Visit the author’s website, emilysiems.com, to read Siems’ blog and an excerpt from Springhaven, the first book in the series.

Featured Photo: The Shopkeeper of Alsace by Laura Knoy

Album Reviews 25/12/11

Ski Team, Burnout Boys (self-released)

New York native Lucie Lozinski looks (and often sings) like an awkward twee-waif Zoomer, but she’s been around the block quite a bit. Her father owned a backyard studio, and that somehow led to her singing backup for the likes of Tony Bennett and Queen Latifah before she turned 10. She’s pretty excited about releasing this debut album under her stage name Ski Team in January, but as promised in the Playlist column, there’s holiday music afoot this week, and she was able to eke out a rough-ish draft of “Santa” just before my deadline. There’s a light, frosty elegance to the beginning of it, in which she toys with covering “The First Noel” and then switches gears into epic/country-fied Chappell Roan mode, while introducing some world-class sampling into the mix. The push track is “Thirst Trap For Diego,” which combines wood-paneled ’80s disco with spaceship incidentals and some pretty odd found sounds. “Gilroy” has elements of Taylor Swift and Sheryl Crow within its pretty-crunchy-pretty pattern. Lots of decent melody here. A —Eric W. Saeger

Brian Sumner, Christmas (self-released)

This jazz guitarist has racked up a pretty impressive 400,000 Spotify listens this year on the way to making a name for himself as an improv specialist; his previous record For What explored a variety of emotions and themes, but this one is, as you’d venture to offer if pressed by the Spanish Inquisition, more focused on the holidays: “Within the context of his own mind, Sumner puts himself in the family room, at the dinner table, near the front door waiting for guests to arrive, in fights, away from home and in a myriad of other situations, and then freely improvises to the thoughts and feelings that are invoked,” and — waitwhat, “in fights?” Well, those come with the holidays too of course, in case you tend to avoid the news (which is always a good idea), but in all honesty, tension and emotional discomfort of any sort are rare commodities here. It’s mostly upbeat; if the idea of having a highly trained expert noodling around on a barely plugged electric guitar as you stare into a fire appeals to you, you’ll want this. A —Eric W. Saeger

PLAYLIST

• Look out, fam, I’ll be talking about holiday records again this week. Of course, I should have been talking about that in Hippo’s holiday issue, but like I told you people last week or whenever it was, I wasn’t deluged with holiday albums until after I’d written the column for the holiday issue, so I have an excuse. Just making you aware that I actually do pay attention to what I’m doing once in a while, and speaking of that, I also haven’t forgotten that I promised to pop into some local-to-Manchvegas clubs and talk about some of our struggling artists, and I do plan to do that once I’m not crazy-busy with a million-billion stupid things in my “semi-retirement” from work hell, but toward all this nonsense, I’ll have you know that I took my nephew to this year’s Trans Siberian Orchestra concert at SNHU Arena, on Black Friday, a family ChristmaHannuKwanzaa tradition! We were seated dead center in the 10th row, and it literally doesn’t get better than that; Petunia couldn’t go because she was sick, so I took my nephew. He’d never been to a big concert, let alone sat so close to the stage that one of the guitarists tried to throw a pick to him, so I expected him to be all full of young Millennial enthusiasm afterward, you know how they get. But the first thing he said? “Boy, pretty old crowd, huh?” so I was all like “What?!” and he goes like “All the old people!” so I was like “You’re walking home, Bucko!” and he was like “No way!” No, I’m kidding, he had to be in Maine the next day, so I did unlock the passenger door and let him in, but it got me thinking about older people who go to shows at giant hockey arenas. They really don’t want to stand up, even when there are lasers and flying flame-balls and they’re playing super-old songs, and yes, it bugged me too during one song, when we and two teenagers were the only ones standing up. Look, man, if you’re at a concert, push yourself up somehow and start getting your jam on, you know? Right, so that is today’s rock ’n’ roll lesson, and now we can look at the albums coming out this Friday, Dec. 12! We’ll start with English EDM-pop singer-producer Fred Again, whose new album USB002 is the follow-up to USB001, I don’t know what it all even means! There is a rehearsal video that shows him smoking butts, nodding his head a lot and playing his ProTools Tamagotchi thing, maybe you’ll find it interesting. OK fine, whatever, there’s some decent trance and tribal house that sounds fine if terribly 2010s to me, let’s continue.

• Many of you hip-hop scamps love the collaborations you’ve heard over the years between Nas and DJ Premier, and guess what, they’re releasing an album together! Titled Light Years, it starts with “Solar Scriptures,” which features a piano-driven old-school hip-hop beat. It’s uneventful, but what else would you expect?

• Nate Amos, more famously known as This Is Lorelei, is from Vermont, and his second album, Holo Boy, spotlights the title track, a slow grungy tune that has a lot of melody and weird guitar sounds. If Pavement didn’t suck they’d sound like this.

• We’ll close with former Kiss drummer Peter Criss, whose eponymous album is on its way! Lol, he put it out through Bandcamp, but don’t judge, maybe it’s better than his absolutely awful 2007 LP One For All, which included an actual cover of “Send In The Clowns,” let’s go see! Yup “Creepy Crawlers” is a cool hard-rock song, you’ll like it! —Eric W. Saeger

Featured Photo: Ski Team, Burnout Boys and Brian Sumner, Christmas

Album Reviews 25/12/04

Tom Smith, There Is Nothing In The Dark Which Isn’t There In The Light (Play It Again Sam Records)

First solo album for the leader of The Editors, a Birmingham, England alt-rock band with whom you may be familiar for such semi-hits as “Papillon,” a really sturdy tune that sounded like Elbow with a more liberal dollop of Bruce Springsteen and more sweeping orchestration. For this one, Smith originally started constructing the songs with long-time collaborator Andy Burrows (they’d already done two albums together), but he ultimately decided to go it alone with producer Iain Archer, whose credits include Snow Patrol’s Final Straw LP. Thematically it’s about loneliness and resilience, its half-plugged guitars driving that obvious point home, which is to say it’s in no way an Editors album, more a songwriting showcase, but then again Smith’s writing for Editors was always top-drawer. That ability’s on full display here with “Leave,” an Americana-drenched slow-burner, and the finger-picking “Broken Time,” which could be mistaken for Coldplay in acoustic mode. One couldn’t say it’s a good start, more a next-phase statement by a well-established songwriter. A —Eric W. Saeger

TEED, Always With Me (Nice Age Music)

This Los Angeles producer (real name Orlando Higginbottom) goes by the TEED acronym nowadays after having spent a few years performing as Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, a nym that bespeaks a lot more upbeat fun than he delivers. He’s a thinking dude who’s “yearning for connection at the end of the world,” publicly posing such questions as “How do we find happiness in the chaos of our world? How do we release music in a broken, toxic industry?” etc. As such, he and his unapologetically ’80s-tinged sounds fit in well in a shattered world that has no choice anymore but to face its mortality. I agree with the sentiment of course, but the execution feels like defeatism at times: “My Melody” borrows its sadly resigned, minor-key-driven vibe from Spandau Ballet, Depeche Mode and The Motels, but on the other hand he’s obviously influenced by MGMT, Gorillaz and things like that, and that side of him sees plenty of light at the end of the tunnel, as “Desire” attests. Nice, melodic stuff here. He’ll be at Bsmt in Boston on Friday, Dec. 5. A —Eric W. Saeger

PLAYLIST

• Wow, just look at this year, running toward its finish line as fast as it can, and who could blame it, if I were the year 2025, I’d be doing the same thing, hiding my face in shame and trying to forget I ever even happened, wouldn’t you? But hold it, 2025 isn’t quite done tormenting us, because it looks like there are more albums coming out this Friday, Dec. 5! And look at that, this week I didn’t even have to resort to asking the AI gods what albums are coming out, because there are enough serious albums that are coming out that I don’t have to risk it, which is good, because as wonderful and omniscient as AI is, it has wrought chaos, like the time Zillow had to fire 2,000 employees because their AI-powered home-value-forecasting program screwed the pooch completely, or the time New York City’s MyCity chatbot got caught encouraging business owners to perform illegal activities. And plus, with my luck, when it’s the dead of Christmas week and there are literally no new albums coming out, I’ll ask Google’s AI droid for a handy list of records I can tell all you nice people about, and the AI will glitch out in the manner of the Year 2000 software bug, and I’ll be telling you about “new records” that literally came out 100 years ago, like Vernon Dalhart’s “Puttin’ On the Style,” which came out in December 1925. Now, if something like that ever does happen, I hope you’ll be nice and write it off as a little technical glitch that wasn’t my fault at all, it was our robot matrix overlords, and you’ll tell me you’re actually super-glad that you bought an album that was recorded by a military bandleader who played the coronet. Who knows, it might lead people to buy Al Jolson records instead of video game soundtracks, which would be a massive win-win all around, don’t you think? Whatever, either way, we don’t have to worry about any Terminators at the moment, because look who has a new album coming out on Friday, none other than Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds! What’s that? No, silly, Nick Cave only started making records in the 1970s, so he wasn’t the one who recorded the original version of “Yes Sir That’s My Baby” in the 1920s, you’re thinking of Gene Austin, can you not be insolent for one second, that’d be great. All right, this new Nick Cave album is called God Live, which led me to assume that it’s a live album, which it is, which proves once again that I am the best music journalist in our state and you should buy me a coffee on my Patreon. Nick still looks like the Tall Man from the 1979 film Phantasm and he still sings like Dr. Frank N. Furter in the new live version of “Wild God,” so all is bright this holiday season!

• Commercial-bluegrass outfit Zac Brown Band’s most famous song is “Chicken Fried,” which has been my personal national anthem recently, given that it’s all I’ve really wanted to eat for many a fortnight. Their new album Love & Fear includes the single “Let It Run,” which features Snoop Dogg doing some rapping, because it is a song about the “devil’s lettuce” or whatever you little monsters call it nowadays, the end.

• Since 2012, dream-pop princess Melody Prochet’s main project has been Melody’s Echo Chamber, whose new LP is Unclouded. The single, “In The Stars,” is a slow, bug-eyed tune that is “distinctly Sixties,” a phrase no one can say 10 times fast.

• We’ll call it a week with Anna of the North’s new album, Girl In A Bottle! Anna is from Norway, which is fine by me since we’re not at war with them at the moment (yet); lead single “Dream Girl” is a cross between New Young Pony Club and TLC (yes, that TLC). It’s agreeable enough. —Eric W. Saeger

Featured Photo: Tom Smith, There Is Nothing In The Dark Which Isn’t There In The Light and TEED, Always With Me

Album Reviews 25/11/27

Hirons, Future Perfect (Western Vinyl)

This debut EP earned at least an A grade before I even plopped the record on the (yes, literal, many thanks to Western Vinyl) turntable, what with its being helped along by experimental-pop genius Luke Temple, a constant fixture in this column for many years now (if you haven’t listened to him yet, please do). Jenny Hirons is an unabashed, deeply educated art-wonk who’d obviously love to delete her dreary LinkedIn forever and simply flit around, Zola Jesus style, from makeshift museum soundstage to sweaty nightclub and back again, but wouldn’t we all; such things require interesting, really good tuneage, which she duly exhibits here with this short set of airy, light but sturdy experiments. Her voice is a dead ringer for Toad The Wet Sprocket’s Glen Phillips in upper-register mode, with more than a touch of José González, which explains the “sturdy” adjective, but again, we’re in experimental territory here. “Vertigo” combines Caribbean percussion with circuit-bending to captivating effect; “Being The Cause” is waltz-time yacht-pop; “TV Sermon” blends Enya with Bowie, and the balance forward completes her pastel dream that involves, as she describes it, “shaking off drudgery, returning to play and becoming the cause of our own lives.” Irresistible stuff. A+ —Eric W. Saeger

Bog Band, Mocashno Days (Headlamp Records)

You’re forgiven for noting this duo’s name and assuming they’re an Irish outfit playing drunk-ass pub rock, but you’re actually half right: They’re from Ireland, but there’s literally nothing Irish-folk about this record. Elsewhere on this page I mention Luke Temple, and his brand of highly listenable alternative/experimental pop is in the same church but a different pew. The shoegazey vocals are floaty, detached and Beach Boys-esque, but more in the manner of Sigur Ros, Spandau Ballet or Wham! than anything else I could name-check for normie consumption, and the overall vibe is more Aughts-hipster than Temple would ever bother with. Now, these are laptop guys who’re quite good at their craft, pulling off some really sweet melodies that’ll remind older people of the sort of radio-pop that was common throughout the entirety of the ’70s, but their impression of disco (“Apryl Fools”) draws more from the depleted soil of the Napoleon Dynamite soundtrack and Jamie Lidell’s stuff, than the original sources. But other than that it’s fine. A —Eric W. Saeger

PLAYLIST

• I’m too afraid to look yet, but hopefully a few new albums will be released this Friday, Nov. 28, the literal day after Thanksgiving, so I will have something to talk about in this multiple award-winning column! OK, I looked, and it’s even worse than I thought; according to the Metacritic website there’s just one album coming out on the 28th, namely Don’t Tease Me With A Good Time, from Jessie J! Yes, out of all the holiday traditions, the stupidest one continues: Almost no new albums are released on the biggest shopping day of the year. Now, I know what you’re thinking, how does this make my job harder as your favorite music journalist? Well, traditionally, my short answer has always been, “Fine, I’ll just Google it and begin the grim task of weeding through the vast wasteland of music journalism websites that have nothing but misinformation or news about ‘new albums’ from 11-year-old rappers who bust rhymes about their pet lizards and the joy of eating their mom’s spaghetti.” But wait! We are in a brand new era, the time of AI, a “technological marvel” that’s in a bubble that will eventually destroy Oracle and a bunch of other Godzilla-sized tech companies that think that throwing literally tens of trillions of dollars at a technology that doesn’t have an actual business model (aside from maybe-probably charging people to use ChatGPT, which will certainly fail horrendously when tiny companies that don’t need trillions of dollars in revenue eat their lunch) is smart strategy. So while we wait for the tech economy to collapse a hundred times worse than it did in 2000, you better believe I was going to ask the free Google AI bot “What new albums are coming out on Nov. 28?” and guess what, it knew about plenty of new albums, that I can talk about in this space, for you to read about! And no, I’m not talking about devil-metal albums from Scandinavian bands with unreadable band logos (although there is one, Winter Mass, the upcoming live album from Norwegian band 1349, and yes, just as you’d expect, it sounds like a hyper-speed punk band with down-tuned guitars playing as fast as they can while their Cookie Monster frontman yells at the crowd at the top of his lungs, demanding everyone’s COOOKIEEEES), I’m talking about actual album-albums! Come look!

West Texas Degenerate is the third LP from Odessa, Texas-based Treaty Oak Revival, which specializes in an amalgam of Red Dirt country, southern rock, and punk! Sometimes they wear funny French-chef hats, and they don’t like people in general, which means they’ve earned your wholehearted approval! They recently appeared at the Grand Ole Opry, which means that even Nashville is taking them seriously; there are no preview songs on YouTube with regard to this new album, but they have a snippet on their Instagram that sounds like a cross between Primus, Molly Hatchet and Black Sabbath, and one of the guys punches a whole watermelon as hard as he can and the thing basically blows up, this is my new favorite Southern rock band, at least for the rest of today!

• Who says the French can’t do dub riddims? OK, fine, most non-French people do, but if you’ll just be open to new ideas, you’ll probably like Dub Inc, whose new album Atlas includes a pretty killer track called “Décibels!” Just picture Method Man covering a Bob Marley tune and — oh, you’re buying it now, good idea!

• We’ll wrap it up with Jessie J’s Don’t Tease Me With A Good Time, just to prove I didn’t forget that I mentioned her at the top of this column! No, I’m kidding, it took her five years to finish this record and it shows, “Living My Best Life” is a great wide-screen diva-soul tune that’s better than anything Mariah Carey’s ever done. —Eric W. Saeger

Featured Photo: Hirons, Future Perfect (Western Vinyl) Bog Band, Mocashno Days (Headlamp Records)

Wreck, by Catherine Newman

(Harper, 224 pages)

When my son was little and found it hard to sit through movies, he once announced in the middle of a showing, “If they don’t start blowing stuff up soon, I’m outta here.”

Even as an adult, he wouldn’t make it halfway through a Catherine Newman novel.

Newman’s success comes not from explosive plots but from the memorable characters she develops and the dialogue she crafts that makes the experience of reading her books not like reading a book but like eavesdropping on your neighbors or the people at the next table at a diner. In Wreck she returns to the family she introduced in 2024’s Sandwich, which was a nod to both the Cape Cod town and to challenges of people caring for both children and parents.

Two years older, 50-something parents Nick and Rachel (who goes by Rocky) are still looking for that empty nest. Son Jamie is married and working as a consultant in New York, and daughter Willa has a university job that involves caring for fruit flies in a lab, but Rocky’s father has moved in with the family after the death of his wife. While prone to missing a beat in a conversation, Grandpa is otherwise in good shape, and things are going well for the family in general.
But then, as Newman writes in a memorable opening in which an horned owl looks down from its perch as a car and a train are about to collide, “a great screeching has begun.”

The young man who dies in the accident, Miles Zapf, was a local; the family knew him, but only casually. But there is an unexpected connection that gradually becomes clever as the investigation continues and Rocky and Willa become increasingly obsessed with the case, and Rocky starts paying attention to Miles’s mother’s posts on social media.

Meanwhile, Rocky has a strange rash that is spreading all over her body, sending her from one perplexed doctor to another and finally into Boston for a spiral CT scan, and into the rabbit hole of the internet, where every ailment is just one click away from being seen as a malignancy.

Again, there is nothing in the way of a hang-on-to-your-seats plot to find here, just a slow unraveling of normalcy, the loss of which no one notices until it’s gone. Newman herself told an interviewer she struggled to find an elevator pitch for the book, “because nothing really happens,” which isn’t exactly true, but the events do unfold, shall we say, languidly. At times, Newman seems reluctant to even let her characters finish a meal, because they are all enjoying being together so much. (More than one chapter is just the family having breakfast and talking.)

And yet how can you not love a writer who uses Godzilla as a verb? As in Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory, there are surprises around every corner, surprises in packages of words.

Readers will recognize people in their own lives in Newman’s characters, who are rich in human foibles while deeply empathetic. Rocky’s late mother, for example, appears in one memory in which she is reporting on the health of someone she barely knows. Trying to figure out why, Rocky muses that her mother must have been trying to connect with her, maybe about their own frailty or mortality. “I don’t know why all our tender feelings have to masquerade as news,” she thinks.

In one of my favorite scenes — which takes place at yet another family meal — Rocky mulls over how validated she feels when her adult children take up one of her habits. It feels like a vote of confidence, she thinks, when a child later comes to buy the same kind of olive oil, for example, that you do.

But then she recounts the day that Jamie suddenly announced to his parents, “It turns out, I really like lamb.”

“The utterance was a little more heated than one might expect. ‘You guys have always been like, We don’t like lamb. Like, as a family. We are a people who don’t like lamb!’”

The ensuing conversation is both comical and full of the best kind of family drama, the kind that will one day result in a story, not lingering bitterness.

Combining humor and poignancy can be hard to pull off, but Newman is a master. In the matter of her health, Rocky says, “I’m the kind of kale-eating person who nonetheless has a massive stable of doctors, everybody whinnying and rearing up on their hind legs and neighing out their copay requests.” It is in writing about Rocky’s journey through the health care system that Newman’s gifts shine through, pointing out the frustrations that a patient can have with the system while at the same time being grateful for the technology and the professionals who see us through illness. And, of course, the bewilderment of a once-healthy person suddenly thrust into this strange world:

“One minute, you’re with all the healthy people on the beach, everyone enjoying the sunshine and salt spray, maybe tossing a Frisbee around. And then suddenly you’re alone in the waves, getting yanked out to sea by some medical undertow, the shore receding from view while all the healthy people wave to you pityingly.”

Newman writes about pill organizers and stool samples, and teaching hospitals and patient portals, while making wry observations about the sort of stuff offered on Buy Nothing websites and the aching love a mother has for her children, which subsides not in the least when they move out. In other words, she writes about real life. It is, Rocky says, kind of like the game Chutes and Ladders: “The constant ascending and descending — every good and bad thing seeming, in moments, so random and temporary.” In Wreck, Newman gives us a diversion from our own, reassurance that we are all in this together, and there are laughs to be had even when things don’t turn out the way we hope. Readers will hope they’ve not seen the last of Nick and Rocky. B+Jennifer Graham

Newman will read from Wreck at The Toadstool Bookshop in Peterborough beginning at 6 p.m., Friday, Nov. 21.

Featured Photo: Wreck, by Catherine Newman (Harper, 224 pages)

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