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The Book Borrower [Paperback]

Alice Mattison
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Sep 21 2000

On the first page of The Book Borrower, Toby Ruben and Deborah Laidlaw meet in 1975 in a New York City playground, where the two women are looking after their babies. Deborah lends Toby a book, Trolley Girl,--a memoir about a long ago trolley strike and three Jewish sisters, one a fiery revolutionary--that will disappear and reappear throughout the twenty-two years these women are friends.

Through two decades Deborah and Toby raise their children, embark on teaching careers, and argue about politics, education, and their own lives. One day during a hike, they have an argument that cannot be resolved--and the two women take different, permanent paths--but it is ultimately the borrowed book that will bring them back together. With sensitivity and grace, Alice Mattison shows how books can rescue us from our deepest sorrows; how the events of the outside world play into our private lives; and how the bonds between women are enduring, mysterious, and laced with surprise.


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From Amazon

As with so many contemporary classics of female friendship--and make no mistake, The Book Borrower joins the ranks--Alice Mattison's novel begins in a park with two young mothers minding their children. Toby Ruben and Deborah Laidlaw strike up a prickly, talky relationship when Deborah loans Toby a book, Trolley Girl. Toby is charmed by her new friend: after Deborah calls, she "felt that swirl in the throat, as when the teacher said hers was the best; and she was also troubled." She's equally charmed by the book, reading as she pushes her baby in his stroller, reading late into the night. Trolley Girl forms a narrative-within-the-narrative; we read it along with Toby. It is the memoir of a woman whose sister was killed in a 1921 trolley strike. A third sister, an anarchist rabble-rouser named Jessie, may or may not have been responsible for the death.

Ten years later, despite their problems, Deborah and Toby are still friends, still raising their families together. They may talk about Trolley Girl, but there seems to be little time for reading; instead, the two women teach classes, take classes, scold children. The novel leaps ahead another 10 years: The women's friendship comes to a tragic end. Just when Toby is at her lowest ebb of despair, who should appear in her (real) life but Jessie, the anarchist sister, who happens to live nearby. Jessie brings Toby an unexpected measure of comfort.

Alice Mattison's novel of friendship and history succeeds on so many levels it's almost dizzying. As a portrait of friendship it is difficult and true. As a diagram of loss it is exacting and rigorous. Yet the author has bigger goals here. Like Margaret Drabble in her later work, Mattison seeks to connect the bloody events of the world to the quiet lives of her characters. And, finally, she comes up with an allegory of reading itself: the character Jessie steps out of the pages of Trolley Girl to provide Toby with the solace she needs. So books daily come to our rescue. --Claire Dederer --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

The pleasures, intimacies, tensions and failures of female friendship frame this subtle, psychologically rich novel, which chronicles the volatile relationship between two women and highlights issues of loyalty, sacrifice and guilt. In brisk, energetic prose, Mattison (Hilda and Pearl) investigates the prickly territory between affection and unconscious jealousy, avowals of devotion and secret betrayals, commitment and selfishness. On the day in 1975 when they meet in a Boynton, Mass., playground with their respective young children, Deborah Laidlaw loans Toby Ruben Trolley Girl, a book about a tragic trolley-car accident that occurred in the town in 1920. Ample, embracing, generous Deborah is a Catholic earth mother. Ruben (she thinks of herself only by her surname) is a harder person, Brooklyn-born, rough-edged, subconsciously resentful, Jewish. Despite their apparent incompatibility and Ruben's competitive streak, the two women sustain a deep attachment over two decades, interrupted twice when Ruben causes Deborah grief (and her job) by denigrating her teaching ability (a profession they both share). But an essential affinity always draws them back together, and they debate existential questions in a quirky sort of verbal shorthand, until the day when Deborah declares to Ruben: "You have a kindness defect," and admits she's frightened of Ruben's harsh assessment of herself and others. Suddenly, Deborah's death in an auto accident and the reappearance of the book Ruben borrowed long ago (passages from which have been interspersed in the narrative) connect. Trolley Girl's protagonistAan unrepentant anarchist who caused the deadly accident when she was youngAturns out to be an elderly sculptor already entwined in Ruben's life. Through her, Ruben achieves insights into the insidious ways unconscious anger can undermine relationships. Mattison constructs her layered plot with the skill of a gem-setter, showing small facets of Ruben's growing understanding of her own failings as a friend and human being, and as she finally understands Deborah's legacy of tolerance and hope. Agent, Zoe Pagnamenta, Wylie. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
THOUGH she was pushing a baby carriage, Toby Ruben began to read a book Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Alice Mattison has written a masterpiece! Aug 4 2003
Format:Paperback
Alice Mattison is an exceptional, critically acclaimed author
of both short stories and novels. With "The Book Borrower,"
Mattison has reached a new artistic peak. This novel is
engrossing, stimulating, and artistically satisfying. Toby
Ruben is the book borrower. Toby borrows the book from her
new friend Deborah Laidlaw. The book is about a young female
Jewish anarchist. The lives of Toby and Deborah, their
husbands and children, and the Jewish anarchist twine and
intertwine.

Alice Mattison gives us a picture of life in New Haven from the
early 1970's through the 1980's, and life in a small New
England town in the 1920's. Mattison has done her research, and the characters and the events in their lives ring true.

"The Book Borrower" is an extraordinary literary tour de force.
Don't miss it!

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4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful narrative-within-narrative novel Mar 23 2003
Format:Paperback
Mattison has created a wonderful novel about the friendship of two magnificent women. There is so much to love about this book, especially the narrative-within-narrative plot. I find the styling and characters superb in their authenticity; the author has demonstrated an unerring voice for dialogue that transmits emotion into a funny, moving account. The Book Borrower is a wonderful reading experience. It's difficult to believe this is Ms. Mattison's first novel, and the rave reviews she received for this brave effort are well deserved. If you like narrative fiction, I guarantee this will not be a disappointment, but rather a joyous discovery...
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By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Two young women, both with little ones in tow, meet by chance in a park. From that brief beginning an unusual relationship is begun. I say "unusual" because it does not appear, over the 20 years that are briefly described, to have a lot of glue. The conversations are in bits 'n snatches and switch topics rapid fire. Reuben (and we never quite learn why this character is only occasionally referred to by her first name, Toby) seems to be the adversarial, critical one and Deborah seems to be the target.

Both women teach part time, yet Reuben is critical of Deborah's style, her lack of preparedness for classes, and the cursory way she apparently skims over the subject matter with her students. So what keeps drawing these two women together? Reuben at times appears jealous of Deborah and her friendship with another teacher. Ultimately she contributes to Deborah's being laid off because of an off-handed remark to the woman who does the hiring and firing.

A more interesting part of this book is its journeys back to the 20s when Gussie Lipkin was a rebel and an activist. Her demonstration activities in behalf of the failing trolley industry end in a trolley derailment, the death of her sister and in a trial from which she is acquitted.

I found myself wondering what the link was between Reuben who literally borrows the book that narrates Gussie's life and rebellious activities and Reuben's own life and times. This remains obscure for more than half the book, although there are hints of danger and possible injury or death; but the worries are more mothers' worries in behalf of their own vulnerable little ones.

The conversation between the two women is choppy, sometimes prickly, and most of the time "all over the place". Again the question, what bonded these two women for twenty years? Nonetheless when Deborah dies in a car accident just after the two women's confrontation as they hiked one evening, Reuben is devastated and that's the point at which the depth of her love for Deborah is more fully articulated. Moreover it is from this point onward that the extent of the friendship becomes more evident and believable. Until that point, Reuben seemed the distant of the two women, the more cerebral. Following Deborah's death, the memories of little things came flooding back (and perhaps it's the little things that formed the elusive glue to the relationship?)...the places visited...the lunches they shared. And Reuben is desolate!

It is at this point that Gussie re-enters the story; she is still very much alive, frail and living alone..in need of caregiving. Her rebelliousness during the mostly un-chronicled portion of her life was manifested in large, abstract sculptures, pieces that are literally crushing her old home.

Reuben is fascinated with Gussie a.k.a. Berry and it seems to be this fascination for an aged, spunky, iconoclastic sculptor that provides more mystery than answers to the story. Did Gussie really kill her sister? Will Gussie and Berry becomes friends? Will Gussie provide some sort of solace for Reuben? She is quite an iconoclast and doesn't seem given to sympathy. Hers is more of a "get on with it" attitude. Is that what Reuben needs?

Some of the most shocking questions nonetheless remain: Was Deborah really having an affair? And why did she never confide in Reuben?

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Most recent customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Tryin' to...
Reading this story is like looking at a framed picture of a framed picture.

The two tales, one of two self-absorbed women making a half-hearted attempt at a friendship, the other... Read more

Published on July 12 2002 by R. Tiedemann
4.0 out of 5 stars What makes a friendship and what makes an "examined life"?
A lovely book (actually a novel inside a novel) in which the reader follows the meeting and then the intertwined lives of two friends, Toby and Deborah. Read more
Published on Feb 5 2002 by R. Peterson
1.0 out of 5 stars The Book Borrower
I wish that I, too, would have read the negative reviews, while plowing through this book. I would then have not thought that I was crazy trying to finish it for our book review... Read more
Published on July 11 2001 by Sherry M. Marger
3.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing if you're 50
I noticed one of the reviewers says that "in real life," women don't meet in playgrounds and stay friends for 30 years -- yes, they do! Read more
Published on Jun 25 2001
1.0 out of 5 stars Really boring
I had to laugh when I read most of the other reviews. This was indeed one of the most boring books ever written. Read more
Published on May 29 2001
4.0 out of 5 stars Friendship Bonding..
The Book Borrower was about friends bonding even when they have evil, negative thoughts brewing. Alice Mattison was inside the narrators head. Read more
Published on May 14 2001
1.0 out of 5 stars fail to see the charm
This book reads like it was written by an earnest high schooler in the throes of a love affair with Virginia Woolf. Needless to say, that is not a compliment. Read more
Published on April 28 2001
1.0 out of 5 stars fail to see the charm
This book reads like it was written by an earnest high schooler in the throes of a love affair with Virginia Woolf. Needless to say, that is not a compliment. Read more
Published on April 28 2001
3.0 out of 5 stars Great story; bad editing
I don't think I have ever noticed an editor's work before this book, but The Book Borrower's editing makes it incredibly difficult to read. Read more
Published on April 14 2001 by Constance P. Mccaslin
1.0 out of 5 stars NY Times Notable Book! Not!
Ouch! Not only does this book get rave Editorial Reviews, but on the cover it is compared to the abilities of Margaret Atwood, a ridiculous ploy. Read more
Published on Mar 8 2001 by Luan Gaines
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