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Vinegar Hill Oprah Book #28
 
 

Vinegar Hill Oprah Book #28 (Paperback)

by A M Ansay (Author) "In the gray light of the kitchen, Ellen sets the table for supper, keeping the chipped plate back for herself before lowering the rest in..." (more)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (243 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Oprah Book Club® Selection, November 1999: Vinegar Hill is an appropriate address for the characters who populate A. Manette Ansay's novel of the same name. After all, when Ellen Grier and her family return to the rural hamlet of Holly's Field, Wisconsin, it's not exactly a happy homecoming. Her husband, James, has been laid off from his job in Illinois. And for the moment, the family has moved in with Ellen's in-laws, Fritz and Mary-Margaret, an unhappy pair who dislike their daughter-in-law almost as much as they despise each other:
The first time Ellen sat at this table she was twenty years old, bright-cheeked after a spring afternoon spent walking along the lakefront with James, planning their upcoming wedding. It was 1959 and she was eager to make a good impression. She didn't know then that Mary-Margaret disliked her, that she was considered Jimmy's mistake.
Thirteen years later, in 1972, Ellen is back at the table with no escape in sight. Both she and her husband do find work. Yet James seems to settle a tad too easily into his old life, and shows no interest in finding a place of their own. Even worse, his job takes him away from home for weeks at a time, leaving Ellen to cope with her abusive in-laws.

In Vinegar Hill Ansay paints a searing portrait of the Midwest's dark side, of a rural culture infected with despair and ruled over by an unforgiving God. Yet she does hold out a grain of hope, too. Just as Ellen seems permanently entangled in familial desperation, she makes a surprising discovery about James's long-dead grandmother--a woman whose rebellious spirit inspires Ellen to rescue herself and her loved ones from the impinging darkness. This late-breaking redemption doesn't cancel out the preceding unhappiness: Vinegar Hill remains a tough, uncompromising tale, one that requires some fortitude to read. But those with the heart for it will be rewarded with fine, spare prose and a hopeful ending. --Alix Wilber



From Publishers Weekly

Set in 1972, Ansay's debut novel revolves around Ellen Grier's struggle for liberation-liberation from her marriage to James, from her virtual enslavement to her sanctimonious, cruel in-laws and from what she see as the stultifying demands of her religion, Roman Catholicism. Financial difficulties have forced James and Ellen, along with their two children, to move back to the small Wisconsin town where they grew up and where they now share an acrimonious and joyless life with James's parents. Virtually every character is victimized by a private misery that causes pain and alienation and that in turn victimizes others. Ansay, who teaches creative writing at Vanderbilt, is adept at delineating these worlds of suffering, and her language can be both apt and beautiful. But she offers too many descriptions of the nightmares and waking bad dreams that seem to afflict all of her characters, and the reader begins to share the sense of being caught in a bad dream. As the story concentrates more on Ellen's search for identity-a familiar tale presented here in a familiar way-this sense of nightmare is intensified by an impression of deja vu. Though uneven, the novel offers glimpses of Ansay's potential to deliver a more coherent book next time.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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In the gray light of the kitchen, Ellen sets the table for supper, keeping the chipped plate back for herself before lowering the rest in turn. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

243 Reviews
5 star:
 (42)
4 star:
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3 star:
 (40)
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Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (243 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars The in-laws from hell!, Jun 27 2004
By M. Alther (Michigan) - See all my reviews
If you ever had a bad in-law experience, this book might help to put things in perspective. It could be worse, you could have in-laws like the one's in this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Vinegar Hill, Jun 26 2004
By smartnurse123 (Slidell, LA United States) - See all my reviews
A brilliant but gloomy story about Ellen who married her high school sweet heart after they became involved after one date. Several years into their marriage, James lost his job and when they began to run out of money, they had to move into his parent's house. Ellen was forced to cook and keep house in a dreary cluttered home with little love and affection. In addition to the terrible surroundings, she lived in a love-less marriage with "Jimmy", an insecure man who was afraid of his parents.

Ellen's mother-in-law was a pathetic figure who accepted a life of abuse and despair with her domineering and miserable husband. Together they lived a status-quo existence where they rarely communicated. Each one lived in his/her own world. They did not decorate for Christmas and Ellen's children were not allowed to play and interact as normal children.

Finally, Ellen sees the light with the help of her friend; she decides to leave her husband and his parent's home. She takes the kids and moves out to make it on her own... a victorious ending!

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4.0 out of 5 stars Dutiful Drudgery, Jun 22 2004
By Polkadotty (Mountains of Western North Carolina) - See all my reviews
What is it that holds one within a family, a marriage, outside of love and duty? Lack of courage perhaps, or misguided religious inclinations. The protagonist puts up with more than many might because of her strong religious beliefs, dogged beliefs which leaves her a husk of a woman. I cannot emote an empathy for this, but I can empathise with sticking it at all costs even when all is bleak and hopeless and hard by. Ellen's inlaws are mean and spiteful, harsh and narrow minded, and set off Ellen's insecurities to best (worst?) advantage. Her husband is henpecked, not by Ellen who does not know how to and is too spineless to do so, but by his embittered, cruel, old world parents. Everything falls most burdensomely on the children of the marriage, who feel the misery around them, but cannot understand why there is such, save for the fact that it must be all of their fault. Ansay's prose is relentlessly descriptive, the details she pays mind to myriad and minute. Not a good read, not a good ending, but rather a painstaking portrait of a time, a culture, and a mindset.
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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Dark, dark, dark
We all know people who struggle to stand up for themselves, who get caught in lifestyles we think we'd never tolerate. Read more
Published on Jun 12 2004 by Student at Dutch Fork Middle S...

5.0 out of 5 stars Loved It!
The extremely normal and familiar sirtuations that the main character in this novel faces are portrayed fabulously by the author. Read more
Published on May 29 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Bitter to the end
What a boring, depressing novel!

It's an easy read, but I personally didn't get anything from it. Read more

Published on May 24 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars A Decent Book--------
This author has the potential of writing well & has previously. Perhaps it was simply the plot (or lack of) that just couldn't keep me captivated. Read more
Published on May 4 2004 by Leigh A. Taft

4.0 out of 5 stars Better than expected
The writing was excellent in this book, but at times I found the story a little unbelievable. Still, I would highly recommend this book, if for nothing else the fact that it was... Read more
Published on Feb 6 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Very detailed
If you like books with a lot of detail, this is it.Besides from being a very nice person, Ms. Ansay writes beautifully and keeps you guessing, very nice book, I recamend it
Published on Jul 2 2003 by 1mew

4.0 out of 5 stars Brutally honest but important
A bitter book without a Disney ending, but an important story. Throughout reading this book, I was impatiently waiting for Ellen to stand up for herself, or if not for herself... Read more
Published on Jun 20 2003 by Erika R.

3.0 out of 5 stars Acid melancholy.
I enjoyed its acidic melancholy. But really... I think I need to watch a week of Disney films to pull me back out of the well. Read more
Published on May 20 2003 by Akethan

4.0 out of 5 stars Cruelty & Dispair in the Midwest
This was not my favorite "Oprah" book, but it was an interesting story. If you grew up Catholic, you can probably relate to a lot of it. Read more
Published on Mar 25 2003 by D. Money

4.0 out of 5 stars Realistic
I felt Ellen's despair and anxiousness in this novel, felt the dysfunction of James' German family and the loneliness as the two of them going to sleep together night after night... Read more
Published on Feb 25 2003 by DeeDee

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