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Infinite Home: A Novel

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A beautifully wrought story of an ad hoc family and the crisis they must overcome together.

Edith is a widowed landlady who rents apartments in her Brooklyn brownstone to an unlikely collection of humans, all deeply in need of shelter. Crippled in various ways in spirit, in mind, in body, in heart the renters struggle to navigate daily existence, and soon come to realize that Edith s deteriorating mind, and the menacing presence of her estranged, unscrupulous son, Owen, is the greatest challenge they must confront together.

Faced with eviction by Owen and his designs on the building, the tenants Paulie, an unusually disabled man and his burdened sister, Claudia; Edward, a misanthropic stand-up comic; Adeleine, a beautiful agoraphobe; Thomas, a young artist recovering from a stroke must find in one another what the world has not yet offered or has taken from them: family, respite, security, worth, love.

The threat to their home scatters them far from where they ve begun, to an ascetic commune in Northern California, the motel rooms of depressed middle America, and a stunning natural phenomenon in Tennessee, endangering their lives and their visions of themselves along the way.

336 pages, Paperback

First published July 30, 2015

187 people are currently reading
10673 people want to read

About the author

Kathleen Alcott

13 books126 followers
Born in 1988 in Northern California, Kathleen Alcott is the author of the novels Infinite Home and The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets. Her short fiction, criticism, memoir, and food writing have appeared in outlets including The New York Times, The Guardian, The New Yorker Online, The Los Angeles Review of Books, ZYZZYVA, Tin House, The Bennington Review, and The Coffin Factory.

In 2017, her short story "Reputation Management" was shortlisted for the prestigious Sunday Times Short Story Award. Her short story "Saturation" was listed as notable by The Best American Short Fiction of 2014, and her most recent novel was a Kirkus Prize nominee.

She lives in New York City, where she has taught at Columbia University, The Center for Fiction and Catapult Fiction.

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5 stars
651 (18%)
4 stars
1,276 (36%)
3 stars
1,105 (31%)
2 stars
364 (10%)
1 star
117 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 456 reviews
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
August 23, 2015
For years, Edith has offered a home in her Brooklyn Brownstone, a building that her now dead husband, Declan, had bought for them after they were married. Their daughter left home for Haight Ashbury he seventies and hasn't been seen again, their son, the villain of the piece only wants what he feels he is owed. Tenants came and went, until the last several years when the group of residents have stayed the same. A disparate group of people, all seeking a shelter from their lives, a group of wonderful people with problems of their own. Edith now provided shelter and succor to this group of people with very real needs. Until Edith has problems of her own, memory loss, confusion and now Edith needs help herself.

It is the people in this novel that draws one in and grab hold , not to let go until the very end. I came to know and love all these characters as if they were actual people in my very real life. So wanted things to work out for them.

Poignant, yet at times humorous, amazing writing, this novel slowly sneaks up on the reader. A novel of families, the ones we make and the ones that are given us. Friendship, putting everything on the line to help other people. Home and what the term really means. Sometimes the home and family doesn't come to us, we must go and find it. A big sigh at the end of this book, I am so very glad to have met these characters. Unforgettable.
Profile Image for B the BookAddict.
300 reviews801 followers
August 27, 2017
Alcott weaves a mesmerising tale about the bonds formed between the landlord of a brownstone and her tenants. Over several years, this group has formed within their abode, tight connections whose strength comes to the fore when the nucleus, landlord Edith, starts slowly descending into the mists of dementia.

Thomas, the artist and recent stroke victim, who no longer feels any creative impetus; he will begin the most unlikely relationship with Adeleine, the agoraphobic who has made herself a world she can exist in inside her apartment, crammed full of vintage memorabilia; Edward, the cynical and no longer funny stand-up comedian, who can only see his life and past relationship now as failure; he will by some strange turn of fate become friend to Paul who suffers from Williams Syndrome, a neurological disorder characterized by his elfin facial appearance, his cheerful demeanour and ease with strangers, he is developmentally delayed, has strong language skills and a heightened affinity to music; Paul’s sister Claudia lived nearby but has recently left her husband and taken to sleeping on Paul’s couch after an episode landed him in hospital. All these tenants, who have formed unexpected relationships with their co-tenants and with Edith, will be shocked when Owen, their landlord’s estranged son steps into the picture. His aim is to have Edith consigned to a nursing home and take over ownership of the place that the tenants have all realized signifies home is truly where the heart is.

Alcott paints an eye-catching portrait that warmed my heart, made me laugh and at times gave me a lump in my throat. Rich and intricately character driven, it is beautifully written and eloquent and it does not fail to appeal with each new chapter. These tenants will become people who are very real and one cannot help but continue to think of them long after the novel is finished. Alcott’s second novel deserves nothing less than 4.5★ rating.
Profile Image for Zoeytron.
1,036 reviews899 followers
November 13, 2015
'How do you tell someone her life has become too much for her?'

Renters in a Brooklyn brownstone. Thomas the painter, now sidelined due to a stroke which has left his left arm wilted. The childlike Paulie, living with Williams Syndrome, an endearing, happy, social butterfly. Adeleine, an agoraphobic who truly believes she just prefers to stay at home. Edward, a standup comic, but nobody laughs anymore. These are just some of the irregular weaves who live in Edith's building and they are all about to lose their homes. Edith, with her gnarled old hands, is rapidly losing her grip on reality.

I cared about the people and what happened to them in this story. Lovely prose, bittersweet without being a sap-fest.
Profile Image for Claudia Piepenburg.
Author 5 books25 followers
August 14, 2015
I so so want to like this book. I'm now half-way through and still want to like it. But I have this urge to take my highlighter and start accentuating every simile and metaphor and that Ms. Alcott uses, and tonight I came to the realization that if I do that, every page will be filled with color. The story is an intriguing one, and I've fallen in love with some of the characters (which is the only reason I will finish the book) but she is trying way too hard to show all of us that she's a WRITER!!!!! I'm a writer who can come up with 10,000 ways to describe the simple act of putting something on the stove or walking down the street. 10,000 ways to compare it to something else that, when you think about it for even a very short while, there's really no comparison at all. Does every action have to be compared to another? I wish I had a dollar for every time Ms. Alcott uses the word "as." She needs to exorcise that word from her vocabulary. Example: "These things are delicious," she exclaimed, waving the biscuits as though trying to keep the attention of a baby. Why? Why did you write that? We get it, she waved the biscuits. Enough already, leave it at that.

This will be the last book of Ms. Alcott's that I'll read (I said as if walking away from a lover who can't understand the reasons I'm leaving)
Profile Image for Larry H.
3,078 reviews29.6k followers
August 9, 2015
Lyrical, moving, and absolutely exquisite, Kathleen Alcott's Infinite Home had me marveling at her beautiful, almost poetic prose, reveling in the memorable characters, and even getting a bit choked up from time to time.

This is a book about how we find comfort, and sometimes anguish, in the home we make for ourselves and the family we choose to embrace, biological or otherwise. It's also a book about finding strength where we didn't know we had it, and the different ways we adapt to and cope with change.

Edith has been the landlord of a Brooklyn apartment building for years, since she and her late husband Declan bought it. The building was home to some of her greatest joys and some of her greatest sorrows and regrets. She is a model landlady, caring for and nurturing her tenants, knowing when they are in need and knowing just what to give them, although she can't solve all of their problems. Her tenants are a group of troubled but giving people—Thomas, a successful artist whose life is turned upside down after a stroke leaves one of his arms paralyzed; Adeleine, whose obsession with antique objects helps her build a home she never wants to leave; Edward, once a popular comedian, whose childhood has scarred him emotionally; and the amazing, childlike, loving Paulie, whose sister Claudia fulfills her parents' wish that her brother be taken care of appropriately.

When Edith's mental and physical condition weakens, her estranged son returns home to claim the building and wants to evict all of her tenants. As they try to navigate the thoughts of their future, they each must confront challenges and determine what is next for them. But this will require courage, strength, even going beyond their comfort zones.

I absolutely loved this book. It's told in very short chapters, but Alcott's use of language and imagery made me literally sigh and gasp at times. There was one point that I worried she was going to take the book down a path I absolutely dreaded, but she resolved that thread quickly and to my satisfaction, differently than I expected. This is a memorable book, both for how it is told and the characters on whom she focuses, many of whom will stick in your brains and your hearts as they did mine.

See all of my reviews at http://itseithersadnessoreuphoria.blo....
Profile Image for Cheri.
2,041 reviews2,972 followers
February 27, 2017
Edith, the kind-hearted widowed landlady who can’t seem to recall where her errant husband, Declan, has gone off to or when he will return.

Paulie, a man in his mid-thirties with William’s Syndrome, his sister Claudia who struggles with taking care of her brother, Claudia along with Edward, a comic who dislikes almost everyone and everything.

Adeleine, beautiful but overwhelmed by the world outside her door.

Thomas, a successful artist who struggles with the limitations a recent stroke has brought to his life.

These are the people who live in Edith’s apartment complex; a place that has been home to Edith since the day she and Declan first bought this Brooklyn brownstone. Almost every memory of hers is attached to this home, her mind going between the here and now and the past that refuses to stay there. The tenants have lived there seemingly forever. Each is broken in some way, emotionally, spiritually, physically. Between them, they somehow manage to make accommodations for each others missing pieces and together come up with a whole solution and ultimately a whole, if makeshift, family.

Until Owen. Owen is Edith’s son, who feels entitled to the brownstone. Owen can’t wait to toss each of the tenants to the curb, with marginally kinder plans for his mother. Owen threatens the security, love, self-worth, everything they have found in this ramshackle family. Edith’s decline prevents her from addressing the problem, let alone thinking of a solution, but they can’t all just sit by and let this happen, or can they? Their actions come out of their desire to protect Edith as much as a desperate wish to avoid their fears associated with moving. Throughout their years with Edith, she has always taken care of them when needed; they have always cared for each other. Can they summon the courage and strength to overcome their obstacles and work together and rescue them all from Owen’s plan?

Despite the “negative” of keeping track of multiple characters that hop around in segments/chapters almost as if they had a life of their own, Infinite Home is a lovely story filled with charmingly endearing, quirky characters who I grew to love. Be prepared to take some time to get to know each and every one, and enjoy life in this Brooklyn brownstone.
Profile Image for Cher 'N Books .
977 reviews394 followers
July 8, 2016
2.5 stars - It was alright, an average book.

Felt overwritten and slow in places. To illustrate what I mean by overwritten, below is the first chapter in its entirety (all the chapters are short). This writing style can be beautiful when used sparingly but is over the top when it flows continuously.

THE NEIGHBORS HADN’T NOTICED the building’s slow emptying, didn’t register the change until autumn’s lavish colors arrived and leaves sailed through the windows the man hadn’t bothered to shut. The wind captured various vestiges—a sun-bleached postcard covered in outmoded cursive and a chipped plastic refrigerator magnet shaped like a P and a curling photo of a red-haired woman asleep on a couch—and flew the tenants’ things before relinquishing them to the sidewalk.

He was often visible in the evenings, backlit by a feeble table lamp, immobile in a plastic school chair placed against a top-floor sill, and he seemed untouched by any changes in sound or light or weather, an ambulance’s amplifying moan or the snap of a storm on parked cars or the inked saturation of the sky at dusk. Some nights his seat remained empty, and yellows and whites and golds briefly filled each room before darkening and appearing in the next, the lights traveling from the first floor to the third, and the movement of electricity was a quiet spectacle, like the reappearance of hunger after a long illness.

When the cold knock of air came and New York turned white, he closed the windows.

-------------------------------------------
Favorite Quote: “Aging gracefully” was a model much talked about, though Edith doubted anyone ever felt elegant or nimble amid the nearly inescapable fatigue, the persistent mutations of once-simple tasks and the shame thereafter.

First Sentence: The neighbors hadn’t noticed the building’s slow emptying, didn’t register the change until autumn’s lavish colors arrived and leaves sailed through the windows the man hadn’t bothered to shut.
Profile Image for Emily M.
118 reviews29 followers
September 25, 2015
Kathleen Alcott is a tremendous writer, and she delivers extremely strong prose here. However, I strangely felt like there was both way too much and not nearly enough going on throughout this book. A worthwhile read, but not as unputdownable as I would have liked.
Profile Image for Jill.
Author 2 books2,063 followers
November 25, 2016
Once, when I was getting ready for a move, a friend said, “Remember, home is nothing more than a piece of real estate.” But I knew then – and I know now – that it is really much more. Home is the place where you are your most authentic self, a place of sanctuary and acceptance.

Kathleen Alcott wisely understands that. In a run-down Brooklyn brownstone, overseen by an octogenarian named Edith who is beginning to lose her mind, a ragtag small group of men and women feel anxious for their future. All are damaged, physically or emotionally: Thomas, a once-time well-known painter who is now partially paralyzed by a stroke, Paulie, a child-man who suffers from Williams Syndrome and his tightly-coiled and doting sister Claudia, Adeleine who is an agoraphobe and hoarder, and Edward, a comedian who hides his fears with caustic humor. Together, they recreate the definition of family and learn to trust and love each other.

This author’s prose is gorgeous – sometimes, breathtakingly so, and her insights are similarly beautiful. One description of Edith: “She was upset because she said (her memories) were sort of losing their foundation, like they were flooded and pushed into the wrong rooms.” There is the fear of “playing nonsensical checkers with incontinent zombies.” Or, in this description of fireflies: “They had seen only little flashes like the beginnings of lonely ideas but not the crowd of busy angels he had come for.” After a little while, I began noting that every single chapter could actually stand by itself as a short story, although this is definitely a novel with a forward propulsion. Each of thse chapters shimmers like gems.

And oh, the themes: what is home? (One character answers, “No need to bring home with me, dear. I know what it feels like.”) What happens when we are forced out of our own poor facsimile of a self-created Garden of Eden into the world to seek answers? Can we recreate ourselves to give ourselves a second chance – through trust of others, the open road, cults, or the great outdoors?

The answers are nuanced: some of these characters can, some can’t. I would give this novel 5 stars were it not for one particularly one-dimensional character. Owen, Edith’s son, is the embodiment of menacing evil, and the reasons for his malaise are way too pat. Also, Claudia’s devotion to her brother Paulie sometimes seems idealized and cloying. Still, with those exceptions, this is a fine book with mesmerizing prose that fully addresses how and why a life is worth living.



Profile Image for Rochelle.
50 reviews16 followers
December 12, 2015
When you look for "purple prose" in the dictionary, this book should be listed as example number one. I have never seen such overuse of metaphor, simile and adjectives. For example:

"The bubbly pleasure drained from Paulie’s face. He looked at Edward like tourists look at the mona lisa, searching & wary as they wait to be touched by glory."

If it were only used here & there it might be okay, but the sentences that don't use heavy handed descriptors are few and far between.

"Claudia permitted herself a restrained snort against the tightness of Paulie's body which pressed against her like a vigorous current"

“…crumpled, like dead things are”

"…his face dropping on to hers like a hammer onto a wall, noises like kissing, but also not, as though something were being excavated”

"She gave an insignificant sound, one as echoeless and quickly spent as that of a bird leaving a fence."

"…and held her determined, like algae clinging to a sea beaten rock."

It's almost every sentence. I love descriptive prose. Adore it. This however, is something completely different. The descriptors add nothing to the text and are an irredeemable distraction from the story.

This is a book that makes you want to go and kill people. Especially people who use adjectives and similes. It's like a fucking jackhammer, hitting your brain repeatedly until you're a gibbering idiot, blowing in the wind like a lost leaf with alzheimers, forgetting why you even started this sentence.

Christa Lewis, the narrator of the audiobook has a lovely tone, very enjoyable. The only downside of the narration were occasional pauses where no comma or stop would make sense, where it was clearly the middle of a sentence. Otherwise, very nice narration & production. Not enough to make me want to finish this book.
Profile Image for Book Riot Community.
1,144 reviews309k followers
Read
July 27, 2016
Now in paperback: A group of unusual tenants in a Brooklyn brownstone have been living quiet lives together, each dealing with their own problems and pains, but when their kind elderly landlord’s mental capacity begins to weaken, the tenants are faced with eviction when her greedy estranged son takes over the building. They have always found solace in each other, but now must decide what they will do back out in a world that has always treated them cruelly. It’s a beautiful story of living on the outside of society and what it means to choose your own family. (Also, does the cover make anyone else want to play Q-bert? No? Just me?)

Backlist bump: The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets by Kathleen Alcott


Tune in to our weekly podcast dedicated to all things new books, All The Books: http://bookriot.com/listen/shows/allt...
62 reviews1,089 followers
July 21, 2015
Everyone's review says this but that's because it is true: this is a beautifully written book. Something to read if you want to get yourself back into reading and/or writing. Alcott pulls out the metaphors so effortlessly yet with an eery sense of familiarity. A portrait into the lives of five tenants and their landlady in Brooklyn, this is a simple story with strong storytelling. It takes a little time to get into but Alcott quickly hits her stride. I chuckled, I choked up. I had to stay up til 1am on a school night to finish it. Makes you want to phone up your parents and give them a big dang hug.
Profile Image for Christopher.
45 reviews50 followers
October 11, 2015
Always, always, it's about the writing. And boy, oh boy, does this young lady know how to compose beautiful sentences. Lyrical, powerful writing. I loved this book!
Profile Image for Jessica J..
1,089 reviews2,509 followers
July 27, 2016
I liked Proximal Alphabets much better than this, which often felt bogged down by a lack of forward movement and heavy prose trying too hard to be lyrical. I wanted to like it, but I was ultimately underwhelmed.
110 reviews6 followers
September 20, 2015
Infinite Home just did not engage me. The biggest issue I had was that the characters were uninteresting and simply not written well. It was very difficult to get into the characters with very short chapters killing any momentum that may have been building up. I also felt that the author's writing style tries to squeeze too much information into sentences. I love commas more than most, but wow.

I read another review about the characters being damaged. I found this to be true, but it didn't have to be problematic. Damaged characters bring a sense of realism to the story and when written the right way can be quite engaging, but I failed to have any sympathy (or feelings whatsoever) about these characters.

The only thing I did enjoy was the references to the Fort Greene (Brooklyn) neighborhood in which I live. Myrtle Ave, Fort Greene Park, Pratt, the old elevated line. It did help me paint a better picture of the story.
Profile Image for Sally Howes.
72 reviews57 followers
November 30, 2015
4.5★s - A real microcosm of humanity in all its eccentric gloryi! These characters are exquisite - their strengths, their frailties, their joys, their sorrows, their tenderness, ruthlessness, loves, hates, and above all, their authenticity. The language is of the highest quality, which is the least these wonderful characters and their enthralling story deserve. Most highly recommended!
Profile Image for John Naylor.
929 reviews22 followers
October 28, 2015
I received this book for free via Goodreads First Reads.

It took me a while to decide on a 2 star rating for this book. It is well written, it shows the author has a talent for words that few authors have, it deals with issues such as Williams Syndrome as well as dementia and the book has a lot of interesting characters. There are a lot of positive things about this book and a few things I enjoyed.

I just feel it was overwritten, slow and the plot was weak at times. As much as I enjoyed the writing I think it could have been cut by a third and told the same story. I like an author to find their voice and to use a lot of words as a rule but in this book it felt like nearly every page was made up of extra words that were not always needed. One of the characters barely speaks and that seems almost like a welcome relief when she becomes part of the story.

I would recommend this book to readers with a lot of patience or those that want to study the art of writing. It is by no means a bad book but it is one that will not suit every reader.
Profile Image for Tyler Goodson.
171 reviews155 followers
July 16, 2015
This was beautiful and I felt like I found a home in this world, this writing, and these characters.
Profile Image for Dan.
164 reviews17 followers
October 4, 2017
I finished this book a couple of days ago and now that I am going back to write up my thoughts, I wonder if I am giving this the correct rating with 4. Let's put it this way, it earned at least that much!

A story about Edith, the rooming house she owns in Brooklyn and its' tenants. I found myself pulled into this ragtag collection of individuals and really loved the characters. A story about family, both in the true sense of the word as well as more loosely, as in this case, the boarders. With family, comes all that that entails, the love, the trials and the tribulations. This story had it all and told in a perfect manner.
Profile Image for Marilyn Woodward.
46 reviews1 follower
July 30, 2015
Disclosure: I received an advance copy of this book from the publisher but that will not affect my review. There was much about Infinite Home I really liked--the assortment of people who live in the Brooklyn brownstone and the owner were interesting, intriguing characters. However. I have to say that I was put off by the actual writing style, which seemed to need a bit more simplicity and less imagery and metaphors to describe--everything. I kept thinking the author, who writes well, needs to read some Alice Munro and learn how to simplify a bit. I appreciate the effort that goes into writing any book and wish I could have rated this one higher.
Profile Image for Lauren Hopkins.
499 reviews4 followers
October 13, 2015
The day you want me to believe that everybody in an apartment building is friends with one another is the day I direct you to a 70s commune.
Profile Image for Maggie Ferguson.
40 reviews
December 23, 2025
i’m a bit uncertain of how to write this review, i have much to say and also little. i think i loved the individual sentences of this book, but all of them together didn’t move me in the way i would have wanted. i think she could write the best poetry ever written. pacing in the first half was odd and i had a hard time keeping track of the timeline between the fire and the characters and things like that. i really liked the nuances of all the characters, and that Edith was real and it was difficult to read sometimes. i think i was expecting a more complete and community-y happy ending and it sort o r just ended. but i can also understand that the ending is much more real this way.
Profile Image for Sheri.
1,341 reviews
March 28, 2017
This novel is simply a collection of crazy people. Alcott has a great way of showing how all of us are just holding it together and once it starts to leak out we are in trouble. Most of this novel reminds me of the David Foster Wallace quote about how we are all so busy hiding our own issues that we don't notice any others and that if simply asked what is wrong we will erupt into a ball of chaos.

Alcott's crazies all live in a small apartment building owned by Edith in NYC. They are long term tenants and rely on each other to share the burden of their issues. During the course of the novel, things come to a head as Edith lapses into old age dementia and her son Owen begins to think about remodeling and evicting the tenants. I really thought the forced plot was rather Disney (something about Owen reminded me of Cruella d'Vill from 101 Dalmatians) and unbelievable that he would hold Adelaine hostage in her own apartment and destroy things (even though he knew that she was weak and would not escape or call the police he had to anticipate that eventually Thomas would come back and that the police would be called; landlords CANNOT do what he did). Ultimately, I think the story was best before Thomas went off to CA; it really didn't need the plot movement.

Alcott has a great way with words; she is very concise, but her turns of phrase manage to convey a lot. A few of my favorites were:
"Of course she loved her children--this was never in doubt--but when they became, more and more, the people they were, Edith felt as though nothing she could have done would have made any difference."
"The kid's brain was broken, but Edward couldn't of course recommend the health of his own. Paulie, it was clear, chased and cornered happiness daily."
"She dreamt, like a dog, kicking often"
"The conversation came back to him like an infection, worse and larger in its return"

I liked Proximity to Alphabets better; thought the plot was better and more thought out (again, this didn't NEED the plot that Alcott forced upon it), but overall certainly a good, solid read.
Profile Image for Jessica Sullivan.
570 reviews622 followers
March 15, 2016
In this sad, beautiful novel, Kathleen Alcott presents us with a cast of unforgettable characters: a group of lonely misfits who inhabit a small apartment building in Brooklyn.
Since her husband's death, Edith, the elderly owner and landlord of the building, has rented out her units to people who might not receive such a warm welcome elsewhere and shown them respect and dignity in spite of their circumstances. There's Thomas, a painter trying to re-acclimate to life after a stroke that paralyzed half his body; Edward, a misanthropic stand-up comedian; Adeleine, a haunted, mentally ill young woman who hasn't left her apartment in months; and Paulie, an exuberant man born with Williams Syndrome.

When Edith begins slipping into dementia, her estranged son, Owen, enters the scene, intent on sending Edith to a nursing home and evicting her tenants.

Throughout the novel, the characters connect in unusual and unexpected ways as each attempts to find some semblance of meaning in a world that hasn't always been kind.
It's clear that Alcott felt genuine love for the characters she created, as each is infused with such depth and beauty. It's a privilege, as a reader, to experience these kinds of characters, and to immerse oneself into their world as they seek what we all long for: love, empathy, acceptance, and home.
Profile Image for Robert Blumenthal.
944 reviews92 followers
September 27, 2015
This is what one would call a beautifully written novel. It is apparent that the author crafted every sentence as carefully and artistically as she could. I thought of her as the "anti-Raymond Carver", where Carver is as spare and unencumbered as a writer of fiction can be. On the other hand, Kathleen Alcott strives to make every sentence unique and poetic. Although I appreciated this craft, I did find myself tiring of it a bit as the novel progressed. She does create wonderfully drawn characters, each with some problem or disability: an aged woman who is becoming senile, a beautiful young woman who is bipolar and extremely agoraphobic, an artist who has had a stroke, a young man with a disability called Williams Syndrome which causes him to act very immature. These flawed individuals all come together in a Brooklyn brownstone where they are tenants of the sweet, dotty matriarch Edith. The chapters are all very short and skip around from character to character. They become involved with each other in various ways and there is somewhat of a plot where they are trying to save the building from the clutches of the evil son, Owen, who wants to evict them all. It is generally a lovely read, with some deeply emotional moments.
517 reviews7 followers
August 18, 2015
What an absolute mess. A novel? More like a long, bad poem that does not even rhyme. Some one needs to teach this poor woman how to tell a story. The stringing together of words might pass for writing in her mind, but she needs to structure a plot somewhere a long the way. Example: How does a half paralyzed man fly across the country, rent a car and track down a missing person entirely on his own. I can't believe I wasted my time on such crap. The worst book I've read in years.
Profile Image for Jennifer (formerly Eccentric Muse).
539 reviews1,050 followers
August 30, 2023
I loved this, my second Kathleen Alcott novel in maybe a month. She is new to me but I just *adore* her style. Her turns of phrase are really exquisite and evocative (I wish I could give you examples, but I listened to the audiobook; they blinked on and then flew off like fireflies).

The voice of Paulie here is a flight of imagination and free association that I'm still a bit gobsmacked by. The tenderness and generosity of the tenants of a run-down apartment building in gentrifying Brooklyn, whose landlady Edith is descending into dementia, is just ... well, just what I needed. Kindness in the face of human frailty. Bodies and spirits damaged but not broken. Connections initially of convenience developing into deep compassion and love.

This is a conditional 4 as I'm still processing the ending. The narrator, Christa Lewis, was excellent and had the sweetest little touch of sibilance on her S's that gave a childlike quality to the performance that worked beautifully with the subject, and was not at all distracting.

I hope Kathleen Alcott has written much more, or is writing more as I type.
Profile Image for Isabel Webb.
46 reviews42 followers
March 11, 2022
I feel bad for giving this 2 stars, because I do feel like the author has a beautiful way with words, but I just did not connect with this book. I believe every book has an audience, and this book might even have a large audience. I’m just, unfortunately, not the audience for this book. I would recommend it to people who enjoy Literary Fiction and read it often. Maybe one day in the future, I’ll try another book by this author.
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