Hollis Clayton is in trouble. His wife has decamped for the summer, leaving him to pursue his increasingly overwhelming compulsions: drinking; spying on neighbors; worrying about the fate of an abducted local girl; avoiding his editor, who is on the verge of rejecting his new collection of stories; and confronting as obliquely as possible the recent death of his young son. Meanwhile, he is spending more time with Jack Daniels and a stubbornly persistent stray dog than with anyone else, including his girlfriend Marissa, who has either abandoned him or been abandoned by him, he’s not sure which. A tender and comic portrait of suburban despair, Fireworks details the events of one strange summer in which a man’s troubled soul hangs in the balance. In her perceptive exploration of Hollis’s disintegrating life, Elizabeth Winthrop gives us an unforgettably powerful portrait of an anguished man, one who is both endearingly flawed and vividly real.
I think I only finished this book because it got good reviews and I hoped it would get better, but ugh! Main character is not at all likeable or sympathetic. Reader is lead to believe that this is a book about him grieving about the death of his son, but instead it comes off as a character study of a loser.
Started and finished date – 24.09.25 to 26.09.25. My rating – Three Stars. This book was okay, but I didn't love it, and I was bored while reading is book also, I think people who like tinkers by Paul Harding or T. singer by Dag Solstad may like is book. The writing was okay but not great, but it took some time to get used to also the ending was okay. The atmosphere was okay, and I think author did an okay job at describing someone grieving the loss of a child. The paced of plot was well structured and steady paced. The characters were okay, but I think they need to flash out bit more.
Winthrop is a find. Very talented. Wasn't sure about the characters at first, but if you give her a chance with him you'll see she's just very smart about building a story from character (a skill sadly lacking in a lot of contemporary lit). Not much underlinable/quotable, but pretty solid well-crafted prose. She made me see the depth of a protagonist I didn't like much. Admired this a lot, ordering her other novel.
Hollis Clayton is struggling. He's struggling to come to terms with the death of his son 2yrs ago, he's struggling with his writing career but he's not struggling with his fondness for "Jack" (of the bottle fame). His wife abandons him for the summer exclaiming they need time apart, to think. What follows is a book about the minutia of Hollis' life, his days, his phases, his scrutiny of life for story ideas. Some of it is painful, some of it is gentle humour. This book grows on you.
Really enjoyed this book. Interesting and realistic characters/situations, great comic relief from the Pratty's crew. Strange in the way that it seems like the story is slow or random, but it pulled me in and held me. I loved the details of Hollis' thinking. Will definitely read more from this author.
I read this as the first book for my readers group and found it slow and difficult to keep picking up. After discussing it with the others I realised that the pace was part of the point the author was making-a non story about a writer who wrote non stories. It is a book about grief and the numbness that many people fall into unwittingly.
Hard to believe this book is written by a woman. It is told in the first person by a male who is going through some very rough times, in the present, and has gone through some in the past. It is not an easy read but it is quite good.
On my list I just have the title, not the author, and there are a few books with this same title. This book sounds vaguely familiar and I've read this author before and the character name Hollis is familiar so this is likely the one I read!
I've read this slowly over a few days and really enjoyed it. It's one of those books which has layers and makes you muse as you read. The 19th chapter (Yard'n'Garden) is very touching and sums up a lot of what the book is about.
I couldn't get into this book. It sounded pretty good by the jacket,but the book was too slow and didn't hold my attention at all. It almost began to feel like a chore. And when that happens.............NEXT!!!!
I had a hard time reading this book. It was just...well, a nonstory. It wasn't a bad nonstory. It just kept going and going. When I put it down, it didn't really call me back to it.
I didn't not like it. But I didn't like it either.
this book was sooooooooo depressing. the author managed to make me feel annoyed by someone grieving the loss of a child, which is pretty remarkable. i only kept reading it because in my head i was picturing his house as my new house and it made me excited!
It took me a long time to get through this book because I initially didn't particularly like the main character. He grew on me, though, and I was genuinely pained by his loneliness.
To me, this read like it wanted to be Richard Russo but fell short. I found the main character to be neither compelling nor funny. I didn't know why he did the things he did, and he didn't, either.