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A Hole in the Universe

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Readers and critics have been enchanted by Mary McGarry Morris’s unforgettable characters and masterly use of suspense in her four earlier novels, including the bestselling Songs in Ordinary Time . In her latest tour de force, Gordon Loomis returns to a changed world after twenty-five years in prison. His old neighborhood is blighted by drug dealers; his brother is eager to help but is too caught up in his own life; his loyal friend Delores makes him realize that he’s just as afraid of relationships as he is of going back to jail; and his inherent decency draws the attention of a hungry child whose survival threatens the fragile balance that is Gordon’s freedom. Compelling and taut, suspenseful and compassionate, A Hole in the Universe will continue to resonate long after the last page is turned. On the

384 pages, Paperback

First published March 8, 2004

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About the author

Mary McGarry Morris

19 books188 followers
Mary McGarry Morris is an American novelist, short story author and playwright from New England. She uses its towns as settings for her works. In 1991, Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times described Morris as "one of the most skillful new writers at work in America today"; The Washington Post has described her as a "superb storyteller"; and The Miami Herald has called her "one of our finest American writers".
She has been most often compared to John Steinbeck and Carson McCullers. Although her writing style is different, Morris also has been compared to William Faulkner for her character-driven storytelling. She was a finalist for the National Book Award and PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. As of 2011, Morris has published eight novels, some of which were best-sellers, and numerous short stories. She also has written a play about the insanity trial of Mary Todd Lincoln.

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5 stars
132 (19%)
4 stars
282 (41%)
3 stars
214 (31%)
2 stars
43 (6%)
1 star
14 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews
236 reviews8 followers
April 30, 2013
I honestly and truly have no idea how to rate this book. She is a good writer- there's no question there and she sure gets that dismal depression which has taken over a lot of the east coast-particularily New England. But gimme a break. It got to the point that I physically could not read anything about Jada.I could not read how passive this hulk named Gordon was. I mean quiet is one thing- but his guy was sleepwalking through the whole book. 300 pounds of dead meat. Really. And Jada's just waiting there to eat him alive- which she does.
Here's what I think. There had to have been SOME light, something alittle bit GOOD to make it believable-but there wasn't. The whole story just went from murky-to murkier. Just hideous gloom-all these parasites taking advantage of this Hulk .And him just taking it- right up to the end.He just takes it all.
Yeah me too- I need an Archie comic after this one.
Okay I just figured out what irritates me about this book. It's because there is this whole notion that says if a
book or a movie is depressing it makes that book or movie SMART. Intellectual.Sophisticated.
And if you want to put any light into it- that makes you dumb, superficial, shallow.
It just ain't so. Even the worst character in this story had to have a light at the end of the tunnel-something to live for- and they didn't . Not one of them. They were all consumed by their own gloom. That's just not true.
Even the most evil soul has invented a reason to live. These characters did not have that. Not one reason to go on. That's not the way it is.
Now-I really need an Archie comic. JM
Profile Image for Erin.
257 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2014
Loved this book. Every time I had to put it down I was counting down until I could pick it up again. Beautifully written. I loved both the story and the characters. I'm partial to books set in Detroit, anyway. I could totally visualize the whole thing - it was like I was sitting on the street watching it all unfold. Other reveiwers have indicated that they couldn't understand the motivation of various characters, but I did not find that at all. I "got" each character and their complexities. That's probably one of the things I liked best about the books - there are no straw men here. Each character is nuanced and interestingly drawn. Definitely want to seek out more books by this author. Highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys books set in Detroit or enjoys complex characters. Reminded me a lot of Richard Russo, minus the humor.
86 reviews2 followers
November 2, 2013
NEED ADVICE!!
Ever since I stumbled on "Vanished" I've been a huge Morris fan, but I quit "A Hole in the Universe" a quarter way through because of what might be called a severe phobia: I can't bear to read (or reread, in the case of books I previously enjoyed) anything that includes the death of a dog. I stopped reading "Hole" because I grew too anxious about the fate of the girl's dog. Can someone provide a signal on the dog's fate? I know this sounds stupid, but it's a very real problem for me ....
Thanks.
Profile Image for Renee Hanley.
103 reviews1 follower
August 1, 2022
This book took me some time to get absorbed into it. I did ultimately become invested in the characters and was anxiously reading more.

The thing I loved about the characters in this book is that although they were all flawed, you wanted the best for them. I could see so much of how circumstance, economics, family, and experiences all played a role in their poor decision-making process.

McGarry Morris did such an amazing job allowing us inside why each character was choosing to say, do, or not-do specific actions.

I really loved this book. The beginning was a bit slow and although I liked the ending it did sort of leave me wanting a bit more so that's why I gave it four rather than five stars.
Profile Image for Marca.
1,051 reviews
November 9, 2009
I stayed with this book until the end, but was dissatisfied by unresolved storylines at the end. This is a book full of characters that are really hard to like. Most of them live on a street filled with violent crime and drugs so they live a hard life. We have glimpses of their lives, but don’t have a good picture of them. Sometimes their motivation is clear, but not always. Gordon is the most frustrating. He is the main character and was recently paroled after serving 25 years in prison for a murder he may not have committed. He is a big man of very few words; he mostly says he is sorry. Is he mentally disabled? He seems to have completed some post-high school education, so why does he come off as he does? Why does Dolores pursue him relentlessly despite his constant rejections? Too many questions.
Profile Image for L.
1,535 reviews31 followers
June 30, 2009
Sad, just a very sad book. The tale centers around Gordon, just home after 25 years in the slammer for a murder; his actual involvement was real, but is somewhat unclear. He has more sense about his responsibility and the results of that act than do the others in his circle. The romantic interest is so pathetic in her efforts to please (everyone, not just Gordon) that she made me cringe. And so it goes.

There is the expected "dominance of the human spirit" stuff here, but all in all the book made me sad. The characters are believable, yes. But these are not people I care about, particularly, or want to know except, perhaps, for Jada the neglected girl from across the street. In fact, it's Jada that raises the book to 3 stars.
Profile Image for Krista Fornear.
36 reviews
October 23, 2014
Picked this up on a whim at the local library (which I normally have great success with) though sadly not in this case. While the work was well written (hence 2 stars over 1) the story itself fell very flat and was very much a dud in my option. I didn't even finish it, which I have only done a small handful of times. All library grabs can't be great while this was not terrible by any means, I certainly wouldn't recommend it to fellow readers either. With a title Hole in the Universe I just expect so much more and sadly it just didn't deliver. Slow and clearly didn't hold my interest enough.
289 reviews1 follower
May 31, 2010
If you have never read Mary McGarry Morris I will tell you that she is the master at writing about dysfunctional families -- if you do not like this genre you probably will not like anything she writes. She actually fascinates me and this book was no exception. Again this book was about lowlife dysfunctional characters but the reading is compelling --at least to me. Not a book for everyone.
454 reviews
August 28, 2018
I kept waiting for the story to develop and it never felt like it did.
Profile Image for Joanne.
236 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2019
A very rough story, but so well written.
Profile Image for Julia Cheung.
170 reviews
May 7, 2022
The hole is the hole of injustice, loneliness, brokenness and all that is wrong with the world - but the book is punctured with hope in the character of Delores, the overweight and optimistic retail worker who keeps giving herself away out of an unhealthy need for codependence - but still with outlines of redemptiveness. The book is gripping but requires intense focus because sometimes the action is described in a stilting way where you have to read slowly in order to figure out who is doing what. But what is most gripping is the way Morris sheds light into the characters’ motivations, painting each and every one in a realistic light so that they are all flawed yet realistic. The characters actually make you experience the gamut of emotions from anger and sadness to joy and mirth. Gordon Loomis is a large, bumbling, gentle man who accidentally stumbles into difficult situations through passive friendship with toxic people (ie Jerry, the high school friend who murdered Janine Walter, a young pregnant woman, but who pinned the murder on Gordon because Jerry convinced Gordon to suffocate her with a pillow until she was unconscious). He develops coping mechanisms while in prison, then when he comes out of prison, he has to find his way in the world and ends up being rescued by Delores, amidst many dramas of misunderstandings, false accusations and even imprisonment because he is the chief suspect in his next-door-neighbor’s murder. Many main characters are memorable and realistic - Dennis, Gordon’s high-achieving, energetic yet depressed and over-compensating dentist brother, his sister-in-law Lisa, his other neighbor Jada Fossum, the 13/14 year old ball of energy, also optimism, lies and pain. Makes you think really hard about policing, justice, poverty, drug addiction, the prison system, foster care etc. The whole story has a very suspensful arc and is a compulsive read, with enough complexity and emotional resonance to be highly stimulating.
Profile Image for Barbara.
1,494 reviews7 followers
January 11, 2024
I like this author, but 95% of this book was horrendously depressing. Often I debated whether I could stomach any more. Gordon, the main character, was sent to prison for 25 years for a murder he didn’t commit. Once Gordon is released, people treat him like garbage and are quick to blame him for anything bad that happens. Even his only brother, Dennis, who claims to love Gordon, is quite willing to throw Gordon under the bus when Gordon discovers Dennis is having an affair. Dennis has always excelled at everything, has a successful career as an oral surgeon, and has married Lisa, the daughter of a very wealthy man. Lisa is beautiful, kind, and a wonderful mother to their two children, but Dennis is never satisfied with what he has and is willing to frame Gordon for a new murder to keep Gordon from revealing Dennis' infidelities.

Mixed into this already troubling tale are a bunch of drug addicts and women who repeatedly fall for married men who falsely promise they will one day divorce their wives.

The end of the book has a few of the good guys coming out on top, but you have to plow through a lot of despicable actions to get there.
339 reviews
September 4, 2019
Wow, this was a new one for me, it was about everything, and I enjoyed it, but I also read another reviewer's thoughts and I agree, the Jada and her Mom references, and the bleak and blighted neighborhood the book resides in was disturbing, and I guess all too true these days. This was another of my trip to Maine reads, and my sister in law and niece may recognize that I am reading all the books that we cleaned out of my mother in law's bookcase and that I took to donate to the fall library book sale. I liked it, it kept my attention, but it gave me a constant foreboding of what was yet to come. I was never really sure I knew the whole back story on Gordon, if he really did what they say he did to go to jail for 25 years, or, was he just there and was set up? Or, he was there and participated, but his partner(s) in crime finished the act and he took the fall? Also not clear on the ending- if anyone local wants to read this, I can drop it by! A good read, for sure, but I'd like a book club synopsis!
Profile Image for Joey Brockert.
295 reviews5 followers
November 7, 2020
This story is like a watching a train wreck – everyone is sad, and not getting better, except Gordon Loomis, ex-convict. Mr. Loomins has moved back home where he grew up after spending twenty-five (25) years in prison for murder.
I am not sure finished this story, it was such a train wreck. But I do remember that Mr. Loomis' brother is helpful, yet he has married and enjoys a girlfriend. The neighborhood is full of drug dealers, one of them is trying to get a 14 year old girl to do some dropping off and collecting for him, so her Mom can get the drugs she needs. Mr. Loomis tries to help the young girl get away from tose bad people, but does not seem to successful. In fact, a neighbor gets caught in the middle and is hurt.
This is about as far as I got, and I could not stand to read more.
197 reviews
October 26, 2019
This is a page turner chronicling the return of a man to his childhood home after a long prison sentence. This murderer is a quiet, polite person who just wants to work to support himself and fix up the old house. As the neighborhood has degraded, and the neighbors are poor, living there is much different than when he went to prison. The interactions between neighbors and the protagonist and his family and female friend are very interesting. The book is well written and a sad comment on our treatment of the previously incarcerated. Worth reading for many reasons.
Profile Image for SharonSuzanne T.Racy.
19 reviews
August 14, 2020
Every character in this book has a place and they help make the story that much more realistic. Without these minor characters, such as the employees at the market, this book would be a dud - mostly because Gordon is such a bummer. Delores is the real star - the descriptions of her style are fabulous.

MMM did a great job making the unhappy, hopeless individuals, families, neighborhood, and town at least be entertaining.
178 reviews
October 23, 2022
This is a well written book which starts with the reentry into society of a man who has spent the past 25 years in prison for a crime which he may or may not have committed. His old neighborhood has fallen on hard times. Drugs, robberies, crime in general.

The characters are all broken. I read to the end, hopng that they could find a kind peace together. I guess they did in a way, but it was a pretty grim journey. Not sure I would recommend this to friends.
354 reviews
January 18, 2025
Excellent characterizations and visualizations by an incredible writer. You really get to know both the people (who for the most part are not anyone you want to hang with) and their surroundings (nowhere you would want to live/work). I listened to this on CD in the car and found I needed time outs on occasion because it was hard to bear what may happen next. Kudos to the actor who brought the book alive.
Profile Image for Laura McConn.
363 reviews
July 28, 2022
This isn’t a bad book, but I can’t say I enjoyed it either.

It’s just horribly depressing, and I wasn’t really prepared for just how hopeless this book feels. There’s a lot to unpack in the novel, questions of what makes a person good and how we hold people’s mistakes against them. But, man, is it just depressing.
Profile Image for Connie Hess.
585 reviews4 followers
May 28, 2023
Gordon Loomis has done his 25 years behind bars and is released from jail.
His brother, Dennis, arranges for Gordon to live in the house they grew up in, but the neighborhood has deteriorated and is full of drug dealers and unsavory characters.
Dennis expects Gordon to assimilate back into normal life and berates him for not being able to do so.
Profile Image for Sidney.
2,061 reviews7 followers
September 24, 2024
My second Morris book in two weeks. Hers is a writing I might be able to handle once every six months. Very gritty writing that leaves nothing to the imagination and this one made me a little mad. A young man serves 25 years for a murder he didn’t commit. Once home and trying to reestablish his life, he is once again blamed for just about everything that is going wrong in his old neighborhood.
2,446 reviews
August 8, 2023
I have not read this author in so long. There was something so real and raw in these voices. they are members of a really down and out neighborhood, looking for belonging with really few resources. thank you for this book, Ms. Morris!
Profile Image for Peggy.
82 reviews
October 23, 2017
If you want to read about depravity, inner city horrors, and dysfunctional characters, this is the book for you. Well written, but not for everyone.
214 reviews
May 4, 2020
An emotionally exhausting read. Brilliantly written. As the book progresses the many facets of the characters are peeled back layer after layer. Absolutely engrossing.
Profile Image for Trina.
925 reviews19 followers
November 9, 2020
Dreadful. Story failed to grab me. Skimmed through to the end, but will stick it back in the Little Library in case there’s someone looking for an undemanding read with terrific blurbs...
Profile Image for Terry.
131 reviews
September 13, 2022
another train wreck but I wish I had hopped off early but I did not. Not worth my time
Profile Image for Lucy.
1,138 reviews
May 13, 2023
Even though this story was depressing, and I wanted to strangle a couple of the characters, the writing was so good, I just couldn’t put it down.
Profile Image for Becca Martin.
36 reviews1 follower
July 31, 2019
(Audiobook). Overall it’s a heartwarming book, though it lost my attention for parts of it.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews

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