Mag, Patrick, and six of their seven sons gather to learn if Percival, the Marine son and brother in Beirut, has been killed in a terrorist bombing raid
Ellyn Bache is the author of nine novels, including Safe Passage, which was made into a movie starring Susan Sarandon, and The Art of Saying Goodbye, which was chosen as an “Okra Pick” by the Southeastern Independent Booksellers Alliance. She began her career writing short stories for women’s magazines like McCall’s and Good Housekeeping, some of which have recently been collected in Kaleidoscope: 20 Stories Celebrating Women’s Magazine Fiction. She has also published dozens of literary stories, including those which appeared in a collection that won the Willa Cather Fiction Prize. After many years living in Wilmington, NC, she moved to Greenville, SC, a lovely city but much too far from the ocean. Visit her at www.ellynbache.com
Sean Astin was my first celebrity crush - I was 7 and saw him in The Goonies - and there was a time I attempted to watch his entire filmography: alas, I just looked at IMDB and realized I've only seen 20 of his reported 174 actor entries!
One of his movies is Safe Passage (1994) and I discovered only recently that it was adapted from a novel. So of course I had to read it!
The book was "just ok" - tense and quiet as six siblings wait to hear if their brother has died in the war (not Sean Astin's character thank goodness!) In a family of seven sons, I liked that each one was the focus of a different chapter. A chapter for mom, and a chapter for dad too.
It mostly just made me want to re-watch the movie though.
Safe Passage is an interesting story of a family that fears that one of the seven brothers has been killed in Beirut. Though it is a solid, well-written book, some of the themes and internal dialogue (especially of the mother) seem a bit repetitive. Also, it was strange that some of the brothers were developed and others (the twins) were left on the sidelines.
I picked up this book because I liked the movie, and I wanted to see how true the book was to the movie. [2019--I should have written, the movie to the book]
I liked the book also--I especially liked the way the different characters had different perceptions of each other and what was happening and what had happened. In the book, as in the movie, the twins are the most under-developed characters.
This eighties novel of terrorism and family life was so vivid! I lived through assassinations, Middle East kidnappings, and all manner of similar difficulties during that time in Washington DC, it absolutely brought it back to me. Explores a layer of terrorism that we are all too familiar with today, the kind where family members in the US are blindsided by political terror.
I read this book after seeing the movie, something I dislike doing. Surprisingly, it added a lot more depth from what the movie portrayed ( no surprise there). I remember thinking that it got a little muddy trying to keep all of the characters straight, although that could be because the main character had 7 sons! I might need to re-read it, to see what my impression is now.