Home Safe by Elizabeth Berg

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: April 2009
  • 260pp
  • Sales Rank: 3,234
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    Reader Rating: (39 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2009
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 260pp
    • Sales Rank: 3,234

    Synopsis

    In this stunning novel, beloved bestselling author Elizabeth Berg weaves a beautifully written and richly resonant story of a mother and daughter in emotional transit. Helen Ames–recently widowed, coping with grief, unable to do the work that has always sustained her–is beginning to depend too much on her twenty-seven-year-old daughter, Tessa, meddling in her life and offering unsolicited advice. Then Helen is shocked to discover that her mild-mannered and seemingly loyal husband was apparently leading a double life. When a phone call from a stranger sets Helen on a surprising path of discovery, both mother and daughter reassess what they thought they knew about each other, themselves, and what really makes a home and a family.

    Publishers Weekly

    Love, work and the absence of both figure prominently in Berg's latest, a rumination on loss and replenishment. Since novelist Helen's husband, Dan, died a year ago, she's been unable to write, and though her publisher and agent aren't worried, she is, particularly after a disastrous performance at a public speaking engagement leaves her wondering if her writing career will be another permanent loss. Meanwhile, daughter Tessa is getting impatient as Helen smothers her with awkward motherly affection. Tessa longs for distance and some independence, but Helen is unable to run her suburban Chicago home without continually calling on Tessa to perform the handyman chores that once belonged to Dan. And then Helen discovers Dan had withdrawn a huge chunk of their retirement money, and Helen's quest to find out what happened turns into a journey of self-discovery and hard-won healing. Berg gracefully renders, in tragic and comic detail, the notions that every life-however blessed-has its share of awful loss, and that even crushed, defeated hearts can be revived. (May)

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    Biography

    A former nurse with a caretaker's eye for the details of needing and being needed, Elizabeth Berg doesn't shy from the "women's writer" association. She writes with humor and sympathy about the small earthquakes upending women's lives and their extraordinary, human ways of setting things right again.

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    Customer Reviews

    Total Disappointmentby EB23

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    November 17, 2009: Talk Before Sleep, Pull of the Moon. Now, those were excellent novels.

    Home Safe is sophomoric. Helen is a most unlikable character, as is her daughter Tessa. I find it completely unbelievable that Dan would spend almost a million dollars on the sly to build a dream house across the country without Helen knowing anything about it. Yikes. Does Helen live in a complete vacuum? I am a writer and I live in anything but a vacuum. If Helen was so successful, I would think she'd have more insight into life. If my life partner were to spend that kind of money on something, it would not only be woven into the fabric of our relationship, but I just don't believe that a character can be so insipidly dependent upon her mate. Sorry, just not a fan of this story at all.

    Author successfully captures the emotional and mental confusion of someoneby formertherapist

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    September 21, 2009: who has recently, or not so recently, experienced a life-changing loss. The almost kind of "dumbness" that overtakes a such a person. She also captures valuable bits of the writing experience and drops real pearls of wisdom throughout the book. While the main character is quite developed and enough to keep one interested enough to finish the book, the plot of the story betrays an author is has tried too hard to make it all work together. Never having read her other books, I am unable to compare them.However I did find this a worthwhile read.


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