Our Kind: A Novel in Stories by Kate Walbert

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: December 2004
  • 208pp
  • Sales Rank: 76,032
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2004
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 208pp
    • Sales Rank: 76,032

    Synopsis

    From the award-winning author of The Gardens of Kyoto comes this witty and incisive novel about the lives and attitudes of a group of women -- once country-club housewives; today divorced, independent, and breaking the rules. In Our Kind, Kate Walbert masterfully conveys the dreams and reality of a group of women who came into the quick rush of adulthood, marriage, and child-bearing during the 1950s. Narrating from the heart of ten companions, Walbert subtly depicts all the anger, disappointment, vulnerability, and pride of her characters: "Years ago we were led down the primrose lane, then abandoned somewhere near the carp pond." Now alone, with their own daughters grown, they are finally free -- and ready to take charge: from staging an intervention for the town deity to protesting the slaughter of the country club's fairway geese, to dialing former lovers in the dead of night. Walbert's writing is quick-witted and wry, just like her characters, but also, in its cumulative effect, moving and sad. Our Kind is a brilliant, thought-provoking novel that opens a window into the world of a generation and class of women caught in a cultural limbo.

    Annotation

    Finalist for the 2004 National Book Award for Fiction

    The New York Times

    One of the many pleasures to be found in Our Kind, a ''novel in stories,'' is the fact that Walbert's chosen genre is acutely suited to her artistic goals. Our Kind is narrated collectively (a technique used by Jeffrey Eugenides in The Virgin Suicides) by a group of older women who have been friends since they were young. While glints of individual experience flash at the reader, mainly in the form of reminiscences, most of the book's events are experienced collectively, and much of the action happens offstage. Had Walbert tried to force her material into a more conventional format, the result would very likely have been diffuse and flat. In its present form, though, Our Kind works prismatically, and its fractured telling accumulates a sneaky, wrenching power. — Jennifer Egan

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    Biography

    Author of the acclaimed novel The Gardens of Kyoto, playwright and professor Kate Walbert turned her eye on the women of the 1950s for her 2004 National Book Award–nominated novel, Our Kind.

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