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The Cradle: A Novel
 
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The Cradle: A Novel (Hardcover)

by Patrick Somerville (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 23.99
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Review

"Watch for it in December when reviewers start listing the year's best fiction....The Cradle is much stronger than a typical first book -- in fact, it is a more satisfying read than many a contemporary novel, period." -- Cleveland Plain Dealer "Karen R. Long"


Review

"[A]magical debut novel...A deeply gratifying modern fable...with the light, graceful touch that makes Mr. Somerville, also the author of a short-story collection ("Trouble"), someone to watch. ..As a small novel with unexpectedly wide range, "The Cradle" mixes the profound emotional pull of parent-child connections with comically eccentric touches." (New York Times Janet Maslin )

"[A]lean, moving tale...'The Cradle' emerges swift and cinematic, an epic story told in a series of artfully curated, wonderfully rendered scenes...As a writer, I'm still wondering how Somerville created this exquisitely complex story on a small canvas. As a reader, I'm glad he did." (New York Times Book Review Dean Bakopoulos )

"[A] surprisingly tender novel...What matters are Somerville's characters, rendered with such warm appreciation of their complexity and resilience that, although he declines to predict their future, we have every reason to hope they will continue making slow, tentative progress toward healing the wounds of the past." (Chicago Tribune Wendy Smith )

"The link between the characters...is uncovered with a slow grace. But the story's real centerpiece is Matt's rapport with Joe. Their spare conversation is beautifully written, with lines of painstaking clarity. The weight of what Matt is doing-speaking, in a way, to his younger self-manages gravity while dodging self-seriousness, a particular gift in a debut novel." (Time Out Chicago Melissa Albert )

"Somerville makes it clear that his title plot device is no mere MacGuffin but rather a sweetly drawn symbol that not only wraps up his debut novel with a neat bow but also communicates a wise and hopeful worldview... Somerville displays an effortless command over his fiction, letting secrets reveal themselves rather than dropping them in like surprise gimmicks. More important, as his knack for oddball secondary characters in overlooked pockets of the rust belt shows, Somerville concerns himself with people as much as plot." (Chicago Reader Patrick Daily )

"Poignant and funny...a well-wrought, often comical exploration of contemporary fatherhood." (St. Louis Post-Dispatch Joseph Peschel )

"A heartwarming debut...a fast-paced, compassionate, moral book. . . . the author succeeds beautifully in describing Matt's journey, which is both a harrowing road adventure and a journey of self-discovery." (Minneapolis Star-Tribune Anthony Bukowski )

"A fine first effort and a rewarding read." (Hartford Courant Carole Goldberg )

"[Matt's] search, in Patrick Somerville's brilliant (and short!) debut novel is heartfelt, yes, but full of wild turns." (Louisville Courier-Journal David Daley )

"This slim and rather unusual road novel is very satisfying. . . . because [Somerville] manages to somehow pack a pretty epic family story into such a concentrated punch of a book, THE CRADLE is the kind of novel you can read in a single sitting on a rainy spring Sunday." (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel Bobby Tanzilo )

"Patrick Somerville's debut novel, "The Cradle," is a lovely, finely wrought tale of unlikely redemption. In prose that floats so lightly as to seem effortless, Somerville takes the reader on unlikely journeys that results in unexpected consequences..."The Cradle" is a slim volume, with prose that slides down easily - so easily that the emotions it explores can sneak up on the reader...The final pages of the novel are surprisingly satisfying and right. Somerville has many gifts, not the least of which is the ability to sketch his characters with firm strokes that leave no doubt as to their distinct and varied humanity. The resulting work is nothing short of a surprising treat." (Denver Post Robin Vidimos )

"[A]marvelous debut...a road narrative that gradually accumulates the mythic echoes and dreamlike inevitability of allegory. Matt's search for the cradle takes on a picaresque nobility; he's like a blue-collar Odysseus, crisscrossing the Midwest in his quest to return home to his Penelope. What gives "The Cradle" its potent emotional resonance, however, is the way Somerville's prose calmly, relentlessly pulls at the Gothic skein of family tragedies that lurks behind the peeling paint and sagging porches, where a sense of inherited sin settles like a thick fog." (Washington Post Michael Lindgren )

"[A] loving and surprising story." (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel Geeta Sharma-Jensen )

"Well worth a reader's time and great stuff for book groups. The Cradle is a novel that comforts." (St. Petersburg Times Angie Drobnic Holan )

"A magical debut novel executed with grace and precision; there's not a wasted word in it." (Chicago Sun-Times Mary Houlihan )

"Watch for it in December when reviewers start listing the year's best fiction....The Cradle is much stronger than a typical first book -- in fact, it is a more satisfying read than many a contemporary novel, period." (Cleveland Plain Dealer Karen R. Long )

"This meditative novel dignifies small gestures, which bring to life the compelling characters. A bonus is the fresh regional sensibility the author brings to Matt's road trip through the Northern Middle West states. Fresh turf for American fiction from a talented young writer." (Kirkus )

"[A]spare, elegant first novel...Somerville's themes of a broader sense of interconnectivity and the resultant miracles of everyday existence retain their strength and affirm the value of forming and keeping families." (Publishers Weekly )

"The stories alternate chapters and eventually come together in this satisfyingly sweet tale of love, commitment, and self-discovery. First novelist Somerville keeps us engaged in this slim novel from the outset. Though readers might guess the connections, they will want to see how the author provides the perfect denouement." (Library Journal )

"With highly charged lyricism and dramatic concision, Somerville gracefully illuminates what children need, all that war demands, and how amends are made and sorrows are woven into the intricate tapestry of life." (Booklist )

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars A journey of discovery...., April 1 2009
By Luanne Ollivier - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
think the cover of Patrick Somerville's first novel The Cradle, newly released, is beautiful, as is the story itself.

Matt's wife Marissa is eight months pregnant. Out of the blue one morning, she insists that she needs the cradle she remembers from childhood for their child. She thinks the cradle may have ended up with her mother - who walked out on Marissa and her father when Marissa was young. With little information to go on, Matt strikes out on a journey to find and bring home the cradle. In another story line, written ten years later, we meet Renee, whose son is leaving soon for Iraq. Matt's pilgrimage leads him on a personal journey of discovery as his and Renee's story meet in very unexpected ways.

I enjoyed the character of Matt very much. He is a thoughtful, patient man with a distinct set of values, despite an unsettled early life. He is someone you could count on to do the right thing. Unfortunately I did not like Marissa at all. She is not written as straight forward as Matt. In the beginning I found her to petulant and unreasonable, determined to have her own way. Although she is somewhat redeemed later in the book, I still found her to be manipulative and never really connected with her character.

Renee's storyline, although integral to the plot, dragged for me. The writing seemed slow, ponderous and unnecessarily drawn out. I found myself skimming through some of these paragraphs.

"She looked at the dark monitor of the computer. Screen saver, stars. She heard the furnace all the way down in the basement creak to life. The high pitched pulse of the doorbell startled her. She looked over her shoulder...."

Some of the metaphors used, although beautiful, seemed to overpower the idea the author was trying to present.

This is a quiet, unassuming narrative on the true meaning of love, family and parenthood that will leave you thinking about your own relationships. To qoute Matt;

" What he felt was gratitude. Something in him, though , told him that whatever the reasons, for their existence, it had to do with this same feeling. Gratitude."

This would make an interesting selection for a book group.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Understated...and beguiling, Jan 30 2009
By Schmadrian - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
What struck me the most about this novel is the difference in styles sections possess. At the start, it is very much a 'literate fiction' piece. And then it changes personalities, Mr. Somerville writing with another hand entirely. In fact, I'm not sure whether this is display of virtuosity...or an indication of the need for an editor's greater involvement.

It is an assiduously written tale, one that seems effortless most of the time. It's actually only when the author changes the tone from populist to something more ambitious that there's a slight hint of pretension...and therefore, of the overwrought approach I'm sure he would have wanted to avoid.

At several points I was gobsmacked, at others heartbroken. Throughout, I was on board for this unique journey, and glad of it.

The book might be slim in breadth, but it's deep enough to get lost in.
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