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The Sweet Hereafter
  

The Sweet Hereafter (Turtleback)

by Russell Banks (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (84 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Atom Egoyan's Oscar-nominated The Sweet Hereafter is a good movie, remarkably faithful to the spirit of Russell Banks's novel of the same name, but Banks's book is twice as good. With the cool logic of accreting snowflakes, his prose builds a world--a small U.S. town near Canada--and peoples it with four vivid, sensitive souls linked by a school-bus tragedy: the bus driver; the widowed Vietnam vet who was driving behind the bus, waving at his kids, when it went off the road; the perpetually peeved negligence lawyer who tries to shape the victims' heartaches into a winning case; and the beauty-queen cheerleader crippled by the crash, whose testimony will determine everyone's fate.

We experience the story from inside the heads of the four characters in turn--each knowing things the others don't, each misunderstanding the facts in his or her own way. The method resembles Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury and Gilbert Sorrentino's stunning Aberration of Starlight, but Banks's achievement is most comparable to John Updike's tales of ordinary small-towners preternaturally gifted with slangy eloquence, psychological insights, and alertness to life's tiniest details.

Egoyan's film is haunting but vague--it leaves viewers in the dark regarding several critical plot points. Banks's book is more haunting still, and precise, making every revelation count, with a finale far superior to that of the film. It's also wittier than the too-sober flick: the lawyer dismisses the dome-dwelling hippie parents of one of the crash victims as being "lost in their Zen Little Indians fantasy," which casts a sharp light on them and him, too. He's lost in his calculations of how each parent will fit into the legal system, and the ways in which he fits into the tragedy are lost on him. If only he and the Vietnam-vet dad could read each other's account of their tense first encounter, both of them might get what the other is missing.

Banks's wit is pitiless--it's painful when we discover that the bus driver, who prides herself on interpreting for her stroke-impaired husband, is translating his wise but garbled observations all wrong. The crash turns out not to be the ultimate tragedy: in the cold northern light of its aftermath, we discover that we're all in this alone.

From Publishers Weekly

With resonating effect, Banks ( Continental Drift ; Affliction ) tackles the provocative subject of a fatal accident involving children, and its effect on a small community. On a frigid, snowy morning in the Adirondacks, veteran school bus driver Dolores Driscoll goes off the road, carrying 14 children to their deaths. Dolores survives; hers is the first and the last narrative voice here. Plainspoken and pragmatic, Dolores and her crippled husband have been longtime residents of the close-knit, economically depressed town of Sam Dents, but the accident makes her an outcast. The flat, almost uninflected voice of Vietnam vet and recent widower Billy Ansel, who witnessed the accident, reflects the numbness he now seeks: both his children died in the crash. Though Banks makes too much of Billy's "noble" character, he effectively portrays the man's refuge in drink and his downhill slide. When he introduces the obsessive, enraged voice of New York negligence lawyer Mitchell Stephens, who hopes to manipulate the bereaved into bringing suit against anyone he can find to blame, Banks jolts the narrative into high gear, and uses Stephens's contempt for the grieving parents--their "sagging porches and rusting pickup trucks"--to render a clear sociological portrait of the community. Beautiful teenager Nicholesp ok? Burnell, crippled as a result of her injuries, takes revenge in her own way, propelling the novel to a moving denouement. Banks handles his dark theme with judicious restraint, empathy and compassion; the result is that this book is less downbeat than his previous works--and more powerful. 30,000 first printing; $45,000 ad/promo.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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L'avis des consommateurs

84 évaluations
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4.1étoiles sur 5 (84 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 CAPTIVATING AND BEAUTIFULLY WRITTEN, Déc 12 2009
Par J Bug "SUNNIE Day reader" (British Columbia, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Sweet Hereafter (Paperback)
This is a great book that blew me away with its many layers of story and the credible tension that Russell Banks was able to create out of such a simple premise, it almost reads like a mystery. He writes in such a way that he opens up the small town of Sam Dent and deposits you right in the middle of it leaving you feeling like you personally know all the characters or might have once lived there yourself. It is also an interesting character study and from my experience realistic in the way each person here deals differently with grief; Some self-destruct while others find new strength, all want to lay blame somewhere and everyone in this once innocent town is irreversibly changed. Banks manages to show all sides of these ordinary characters, even the negative and because this was written from 4 different perspectives almost anyone will be able to find a piece of themselves in one of them. Ultimately it will leave you looking at yourself and those around you differently because every town has its secrets.

As I said the story is simple; One snowy morning a school bus goes off the road and into the frozen waters of a small American town, 14 children are lost in the accident and its citizens are confronted with life's most disturbing question when the worst happens who do you blame and how do you cope. We then enter surviving school bus driver Deloris Driscoll's head as she recalls the morning of the accident and introduces us to the town and its members while making stops along the bus route.

We then switch to widower and war veteran Billy Ansel who is following the bus on his way to work, his story is heartbreaking and full of secrets. The narration then turns to New York lawyer and pariah Mitchell Stevens who has come to Sam Dent like all the other lawyers and media to try and make a buck off the tragedy, surprisingly I really enjoyed his view as you can`t always judge a book (lawyer)by its cover. We also hear form 14 year old Nicole Burnell, who before the accident was a cheerleader and the town princess and is now confined to a wheelchair, her part in the story shocked me.

I highly recommend this and now hope to see if the movie can live up to this amazing book.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Intensely moving, Fév 11 2002
I was perusing the reviews of this book earlier, and I have to agree that this book is one of Russell Banks' most haunting, despondent, and beautiful pieces of prose. The Sweet Hereafter chronicles the story of four individuals who are struggling with the aftermath of a horrific school bus accident, resulting in the deaths of many schoolchildren riding that morning. The book uses four different narrators; there is Delores, the once tough but eternally optimistic driver who now is consumed by guilt. Another voice is Billy Ansel, the ruggedly handsome widower who witnesses the accident from his truck. With the death of his twin son and daughter, Ansel becomes grief-stricken and shuts out any possibility of redemption, offerd in the form of a personal injury lawyer, who placed blame on the town and offers promise of financial reparitions. The lawyer is Mitchell Stephens, who also is reeling from the "death" of a child; his daughter has disappeared into a lifestyle of drugs and detox centers. The fourth and perhaps most intriguing voice is Nicole Burnell, a former cheerleader now paralyzed by the accident. She is a crucial witness for Stephens, and her surprising actions reveal ambiguous motives. I can't really reveal too much more about her, but she is the most interesting character in the book, in part because it is never clear why she does what she does. The book also has a heatwrenching epilogue, demonstating that, in a story like this, there can be no neat sense of closure. Rather, the devastation of survival plagues and haunts each member of the community, and time does not heal suffering, but rather prolongs it.
Another reviewwer commented that the book was light on dialogue. Indeed, it is. However, I think it is necessary to omit large chunks of conversation, because so much of the book centers on the internal process of grief and the ianbility of hte characters to express their emotions effectively to others. Everything just shuts down, becomes static, and indeed, suspends people in a "sweet hereafter." This is an incredible book by one of the greatest contemporary authors in the United States. The film adaptaion is also stellar, with fantastic work by Ian Holm and a parade of talented Canadian actors.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 powerful and moving, Oct. 22 2001
I loved this book. I had seen the movie a few years back but decided to try reading the book anyway. It was a good choice. The characters in this book are drawn so well you feel as though you can see them. The author does a great job of making everyone in this book believable and he establishes credible and decent motives for their behaviors that sometimes seem incredible and less than decent.
The book is about the end of innocence. From the loss of the children on the bus, to the loss of a drug addicted child, to the loss of community and finally the loss of one's self in Billy Ansel's case, this books ties it all together. This is my first book by Russell Banks and I'm eager to read the others.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 beautiful writing
an incredible book about an accident and how it altered a small town and it's people....truly amazing.... Read more
Publié le Oct. 17 2001 par Julie

3.0étoiles sur 5 Well-written but poorly-researched
Russell Banks's novel, The Sweet Hereafter, is extremely readable and fast-paced. Banks has put together a gripping story with characters that are strangely off-putting and... Read more
Publié le Oct. 8 2001

5.0étoiles sur 5 5 star of the year
I enjoyed the way Banks set up the chapters, the story line and the mini plots within the story which all seemed to gel by the last chapter. Read more
Publié le Juil 4 2001 par Bridget Hockney

4.0étoiles sur 5 IT'S ALL IN THE ANGLES...
Russell Banks' precisely-crafted novel takes an interesting technique -- 4 different views of the same tragedy by 4 different narrators -- and uses it to show that the same chain... Read more
Publié le Jui 23 2001 par Larry L. Looney

5.0étoiles sur 5 heartbreakingly beautiful
Russell Banks - one of America's best comtemporary writers is one of the masters of characterization - his portrayal of the devastating loss by an upstate New York community is... Read more
Publié le Jui 6 2001 par ED

4.0étoiles sur 5 Sad... But Engaging
The Sweet Hereafter by Russell Banks is about a town that is forever changed after a deadly school bus accident. Many children are killed. Read more
Publié le Jui 2 2001 par gtigrl

4.0étoiles sur 5 Beatiful but Dispassionate
Russel Banks is a truly accomplished writer and "The Sweet Hereafter" serves to cement that reputation. Read more
Publié le Mai 7 2001 par Nicholas S. Ludlum

5.0étoiles sur 5 Sad but very well written
The story concerns how people go on after a terrible tragedy. Normally I don't like to escape to depressing books, but this one is very well written and a fast read.
Publié le Avril 26 2001 par K. Horvath

4.0étoiles sur 5 When Tragedy Strikes
"The Sweet Hereafter" is a sensitive and perceptive novel about what happens to a small town when it loses a number of its children in a senseless accident. Read more
Publié le Mars 11 2001 par Allen Smalling

4.0étoiles sur 5 Dramatically and Intriguingly written
Russell The Sweet Hereafter is a book filled with events and surprises. His style of relating the story or I should said stories as there were inter-linked events and situations... Read more
Publié le Nov. 27 2000 par Jenny

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