Finding Caruso by Kim Barnes

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: March 2003
  • 320pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2003
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 320pp

    Synopsis

    Seven years separate Buddy from his big brother, Lee, but the boys have always been close, comforting and protecting each other as their father-defeated by poor land and hostile weather-sank deeper into alcohol and rage. When a drink-fueled accident takes not only his life but that of the mother who tried so hard to shield her sons, the boys sell off what little remains of their daddy's tenant farm and leave Oklahoma. It is 1957, and work is still to be had in the logging camps of northern Idaho. But just outside Snake Junction, they stop at a roadhouse; and there, Lee's country-and-western talents get him a job. The two settle in, Lee to his music-and women and drink-and seventeen-year-old Buddy to roaming the landscape, at loose ends until a woman nearly twice his age turns up. Irene Sullivan is a smoky beauty, and Lee makes a play for her. But it is Buddy she wants.

    By turns darkly violent and heartbreakingly tender, Finding Caruso is a work of extraordinary emotional power from an astonishingly original writer.

    Booklist

    When two newly orphaned brothers named Hope leave their poor Oklahoma home to seek their fortune in the late 1950s, it's the sweetly crooning voice of the eldest, Lee, that secures them a livelihood in isolated Snake Junction, Idaho. Barnes first evoked the spectacular Idaho timberlands in her unforgettable memoir, In the Wilderness (1996), and now ably switches to fiction in this stunningly dramatic and tensely erotic novel of sexual and moral awakening and sheer survival. Lee packs the roadhouse with adoring fans every night, while Buddy, who should be in high school, spends his days exalting in the grandeur of nature until he meets Irene, a sexy older woman. Cultured, fearless, and burdened with many shocking secrets, Irene captivates Buddy body and soul, but life won't make way for these mismatched lovers once a white woman drowns in the river and an Indian man, a friend of Irene's, is unfairly accused of her death. As the summer surges on and the forests burn--Barnes is as fluent in provocative metaphors as in she in scenes of profound conflict and revelation--Buddy is forced to face the cruel consequences of family betrayals, racial hatred, and thwarted love.

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    Biography

    Kim Barnes is the author of two memoirs-In the Wilderness, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and Hungry for the World. Her stories and poems have appeared in many literary reviews, including Shenandoah, The Georgia Review, and Folio.

    Customer Reviews

    Finding Carusoby Anonymous

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    May 03, 2004: i cant tell you how wonderful this book truly is. i instenly fell in love with the charectors of buddy and irene. i can relate to buddy so much. this is a coming of age story, through and through. the ending was to weak for this book. this is a book almost every one can relate to, even the most sour puss person on earth. this is a book that needs time to become good. but in the end, its well worth it. again, i cant even discribe how wonder full this book is. great job, Mrs. Burnes. truly magnifisent.

    Finding Carusoby Anonymous

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    December 11, 2003: This was a truly lousy book. I was attracted to it by the fact that Barnes was a Pulitzer finalist for her memoir, which I've not read, but the Pulitzer board wouldn't use this novel to line their birdcages. I grant that Barnes is a very good descriptive writer -- very attentive to physical detail -- but the plot was a cross between a bodice ripper and a spaghetti western, with stock characters and totally implausible plot devices. Wolfchild would never have been arrested for murder without a shred of physical or witness testimony against him; one dinner at a local Italian restaurant with Caruso playing in the background would never have been sufficient to turn Buddy on to a life of culture; and the idea that Irene would fall for Buddy is totally preposterous. No point in going on. Don't waste your time.


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