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Lake People

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A haunting, luminous debut novel set in a small New Hampshire town: the story of the crisscrossing of lives, within and without family, and of one woman, given up for adoption as a baby, searching for the truth about her life.
As an infant, Alice Thorton was discovered in Kettleborough, New Hampshire, in a boathouse by the lake; adopted by a young, childless couple; raised with no knowledge of the women who came before her: Eleonora, who brought her family to Bear Island, the nearly uninhabitable scrap of land in Kettleborough’s lake; Signe, the maiden aunt who nearly drowned in the lake, ashamed of her heart; Sophie, the grandmother who turned a blind eye to her unwanted granddaughter. Alice grows up aching for an acceptance she can’t quite imagine, trying to find it first with an older man, then with one who can’t love her back, and finally in the love she feels for one she has never met. And all the while she feels a mysterious pull to the lake. As Alice edges ever closer to her past, Lake People beautifully evokes the interweaving of family history and individual fate, and the intangible connections we feel to the place where we were born.
This ebook edition includes a Reading Group Guide.  

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 25, 2013
      Perhaps if the many characters and tragedies of this debut had been partitioned off into separate novels or stories, they would have had a better chance at sympathy or sustained interest. As it is, this novel drowns in pathos. Alice, adopted as an infant and haunted by her birth family and ancestors, tells her story, their stories, and the stories of the inhabitants of her small New England lake town, Kettleborough, N.H., from early settlers who go back several generations to more direct players in her melancholic tale. The plot is driven almost entirely by what comes to feel like a catalog of tragedies: suicides, car accidents, disappearances, a fire, characters oppressed and scorned for their sexual orientation or social status, domestic abuse, a miscarriage, statutory rape, killing. Rather than resonating with depth or greater meaning, however, the results is a book hobbled by tragedy, not helped by an endless foreboding and an often ponderous tone. Characters are forced into inhuman postures in the name of serious subjects. The minimalism of the prose, working against the melodrama, tries to wrestle the book from its accumulated weight. Agent: Eleanor Jackson, Markson Thoma.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2012
      A woman strives to triangulate her history and identity in a melancholy lake town in this gauzy debut. Alice, the hero of this novel largely set in the '70s and '80s, has spent most of her life not knowing where she came from. Adopted as an infant, she grew up in Kettleborough, a small New Hampshire town where secrets are pervasive but well-kept. What happened, as the reader knows, is that her father died in a car accident--a common occurrence in these pages--and that her mother has ran off. These details aren't invested with much drama, nor is Alice's adult life: Her adolescence was marked by an ill-advised relationship with a friend of her father's, and the closing third of the book tracks her lovelorn correspondence with a man she's never met. Maxwell labors less on plot than on mood, a blend of modern gothic where men and women are drawn to Kettleborough's lake, often tragically, and a prose style heavy on sober pronouncements and unrealistic dialogue. ("I'm thirteen and already life has become too much," one character utters.) Those flaws might qualify as assets in surer hands, but Maxwell's efforts to give this story an otherworldly quality are undone by its ungainly structure. The novel is arranged much like a collection of linked stories, each bit loosely tethered to the next, and Alice only truly owns the latter half of the book. Earlier chapters are claimed by Alice's grandmother and other relations, and though they share some of Alice's qualities--bad love, the gloomy pull of the lake--none are filled out enough to merit pushing its lead character to the side. Maxwell's passion for storytelling about place and family is obvious, but her command of characters and tone is no match for it.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2012

      Abandoned as a babe in a Kettleborough, NH, boathouse, Alice Thornton doesn't know the family she came from, in particular tough Eleonora Olasson. But like Eleonora, Alice is drawn to the dark mysteries of Kettleborough's lake. Maxwell is assistant librarian at the Gilford Public Library, NH.

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2013
      A powerful sense of place pervades Maxwell's accomplished, if a bit disjointed, debut. The novel tells the bittersweet tale of Alice Thornton, abandoned in the first days of her life in a boathouse in Kettleborough, New Hampshire. Alice is adopted by a childless couple and gradually begins to discover her deep connections to Kettleborough and the potent history of the women in her birth family. Among them is Eleanora, a hardy pioneer who brought her kin to the area, and eccentric Aunt Signe, who nearly drowned in Kettleborough's idyllic lake. As she grows older, Alice longs for acceptance, seeking it with a series of men, none of whom can fill the void in her life: there's Mike, handsome and fascinating but much too old for her; husband Josh, who doesn't love her; and Simon, kind and well meaning, if a bit simple. In New Hampshire native Maxwell's first offering, she slows the story's momentum by shifting back and forth between decades. A more linear narrative might have better suited this otherwise luminous work.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2013

      Full of missing family, Maxwell's debut novel begins and ends with Alice, who was abandoned by her birth mother, grandmother, and adoptive mother. They are Jennifer, the poor unwed teen; Sophie, so class conscious that she denied that baby Alice was her son's; and Clara, whose life goes off track on a family vacation in Canada. In a small town in New Hampshire in the shadow of Mt. Washington, Alice is raised by her adoptive father, Paul. She spends her childhood adrift, emotionally unmoored, unknowingly seeking the family she does not know she has lost. Though the reader knows the secret of Alice's birth from the start, recognizing hints throughout her childhood, Alice doesn't find out she was adopted until her mid-twenties. Yet she feels the relentless pull of the lake and the boathouse where she was first found. VERDICT Maxwell's writing has a whispery, brooding, atmospheric feel that conveys Alice's fragility while capturing both the lushness of the region and its claustrophobic effect on Alice. Literary fiction readers will be moved by this quiet yet compelling work. [See Prepub Alert, 8/9/12.]--Pamela Mann, St. Mary's Coll. Lib., MD

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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