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Commonwealth : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

Commonwealth : a novel

Patchett, Ann (author.).

Summary: "The acclaimed, bestselling author--winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Orange Prize--tells the enthralling story of how an unexpected romantic encounter irrevocably changes two families' lives. One Sunday afternoon in Southern California, Bert Cousins shows up at Franny Keating's christening party uninvited. Before evening falls, he has kissed Franny's mother, Beverly--thus setting in motion the dissolution of their marriages and the joining of two families. Spanning five decades, Commonwealth explores how this chance encounter reverberates through the lives of the four parents and six children involved. Spending summers together in Virginia, the Keating and Cousins children forge a lasting bond that is based on a shared disillusionment with their parents and the strange and genuine affection that grows up between them. When, in her twenties, Franny begins an affair with the legendary author Leon Posen and tells him about her family, the story of her siblings is no longer hers to control. Their childhood becomes the basis for his wildly successful book, ultimately forcing them to come to terms with their losses, their guilt, and the deeply loyal connection they feel for one another. Told with equal measures of humor and heartbreak, Commonwealth is a meditation on inspiration, interpretation, and the ownership of stories. It is a brilliant and tender tale of the far-reaching ties of love and responsibility that bind us together"--Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062491794
  • Physical Description: 322 pages ; 24 cm.
    regular print
    print
  • Publisher: New York : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2016.
  • Badges:
    • Top Holds Over Last 5 Years: 4 / 5.0
Subject: Family secrets -- Fiction

Available copies

  • 23 of 26 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Vanderhoof Public Library.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 26 total copies.
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  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2016 July #1
    *Starred Review* Patchett's seventh novel (This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage, 2013) begins with the opening of a door. Fix Keating expected all the guests, including many fellow cops, who are crowded into his modest Los Angeles home to celebrate his younger daughter Franny's christening, but why is deputy district attorney Bert Cousins, a near-stranger, standing at the threshold clutching a big bottle of gin? As soon as Bert, married and the father of three, with a fourth on the way, meets Fix's stunningly beautiful wife, Beverly, the foundations of both households undergo a tectonic shift. As Patchett's consummately crafted and delectably involving novel unfolds, full measure is subtly taken of the repercussions of the breaking asunder and reassembling of the two families. Anchored in California and Virginia, and slipping gracefully forward in time, the complexly suspenseful plot evolves exponentially as the six kids, thrown into the blender of custody logistics and ignored by the adults, grow close, "like a pack of feral dogs," leading to a resounding catastrophe. The survivors grow up and improvise intriguingly unconventional lives, including Franny's involvement with a writer, which raises thorny questions about a novelist's right to expose family secrets. Indeed, this is Patchett's most autobiographical novel, a sharply funny, chilling, entrancing, and profoundly affecting look into one family's "commonwealth," its shared affinities, conflicts, loss, and love. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2016 September
    Hitting close to home

    "How are you with dogs?" Ann Patchett asks as she holds back two curious greeters behind the front door. She ushers me inside her roomy red brick house to a comfortable living room drenched in morning sun. After she tries to convince me to adopt a deaf Border Collie from her sister (if only), her own rescue pup, Sparky, a tiny ball of black and white fur, makes himself comfortable on the couch between us.

    Patchett is both a champion for and veteran of the literary world. She's published six novels and three works of nonfiction, won numerous awards and owns Parnassus Books, an independent bookstore in Nashville. For her, being active in both the artistic and commercial side of the publishing industry is important, and at this point in her career, inextricably intertwined.

    This fall, in true rock star fashion, she'll set off on a 30-city book tour. It's difficult and draining. "An entire day could go by, and you don't get the peanut butter sandwich you want because it's just thing to thing to thing," Patchett says. But she recognizes the importance of connecting with her readers, both as an author and as a bookseller. "I love going to the bookstores. These people are my friends."

    As long as the journey ahead may be, the road to her new novel, Commonwealth, has been a much longer one. In her previous novels, Patchett has bucked the traditional wisdom of "writing what you know," opting instead to immerse herself in research. Recently, however, she experienced an aha moment that led to her latest novel.

    "I read an essay by Jonathan Franzen where he said that it's important for the novelist to always do the thing that scares him the most. For me, nothing was more terrifying than writing a novel that had to do with my family. I've always thought it's so much braver and more honorable to just make everything up. But now that I'm in my 50s, I thought hey, I can do whatever I want," she says.

    Aside from checking off the box of crafting an autobiographical novel, Patchett was also aiming to further explore her own obsession with time. She explains that Bel Canto deals with the suspension of time, Run is a story that takes place in real time, but what she really wanted to do was challenge herself by writing a birth-to-death novel. "I didn't make it. But [Commonwealth] is very much bookended by birth and death. Sometimes you just get as close as you can get. I felt like [with my previous novels] I had been sprinting for a long time, and I just thought: I need to stretch and open up."

    "Nothing was more terrifying than writing a novel that had to do with my family."

    Commonwealth focuses on 10 main characters from two very different families and follows them across 50 years. The story begins on a sweltering Southern California day at a christening party for blue-collar cop Fix and Beverly Keating's second daughter, Franny. Amid the clamoring, cheek-pinching relatives, friends and coworkers, uninvited lawyer Bert Cousins and Beverly, emboldened by the party's generous flow of gin, share a passionate, stolen kiss, setting off a chain of events that leads to the breakup and blending of their families, complete with six children. 

    The young stepsiblings spend verdant summers together in Virginia, forge alliances, run free of adult supervision and commit shocking misdeeds. (You'll never look at Benadryl the same way again.) It's kids versus the world, until a sudden death carves a deep divide between them. 

    Yet time marches on, and we are reunited with Franny as an unmoored 20-something working as an upscale cocktail waitress. When her literary hero, Leo Posen, a lothario 32 years her senior, sidles up to her bar, their instant connection leads to a passionate affair. Years later, with a bit of a wink from the author, Leo is moved to craft a novel around Franny and her family's tragedy, enraging some of her relatives and leading to some unexpected reunions.

    If you're wondering whether Patchett identifies with a character, the answer is yes, but it may not be the one you expect. "People who have read this book go, oh, you're Franny! But I'm Leo," she says with a laugh. "The things that happened in this book didn't happen. But, it's all true. . . . The emotions are very close to home. Bel Canto is the same book: a story about not being able to go home and being trapped in a house with people that you don't know who are scaring you, and forming alliances with them and loving them. That's what this is. That's my story."

    "The things that happened in this book didn't happen. But, it's all true. . . . The emotions are very close to home."

    Her experiences with her own blended family and her move from California to the South serve as the most obvious blueprint, and readers familiar with Patchett's nonfiction will recognize autobiographical details aplenty. But the real question is, why tap into this wellspring now, after three decades of writing? 

    Patchett is aware that while she was drawn to play with her personal narrative, family members may not be as game to become fictionalized. "Writing things that are too close to home can work for some family members and not for others, and I think this book would not have worked for my father," Patchett says. While she was working on the novel, however, she knew her father would not be alive to read the finished manuscript. He died of Parkinson's disease in 2015.

    Fix does share vague similarities with her father, but some of the most personal plot points are found in the later passages that deal with caring for a terminally ill loved one. "The Roz Chast memoir [Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?] had such an impact on this book. She takes a lot of ownership for her life and her past and says this is the way it is—this was hard and heartbreaking and exhausting."

    Patchett insists that waiting to write her most personal story was one of the best career choices she's made, and after reading the novel, it's hard to disagree. Commonwealth is an all-American family saga, but her touching and even-handed approach to themes such as family politics, love, the role of literature and the acidic nature of lies is buoyed by a generous sprinkling of matter-of-fact humor. It just might be her best novel yet, an assessment that Patchett agrees with.

    "I feel like what I've been doing all my life is not writing Commonwealth. So now I have, and I'm hoping it will bring freedom." She admits she already has an idea for another novel, and while she hasn't started writing quite yet, she has made some notes.

    "I just think it's interesting to think about all the things we might be wrong about, all the things we were sure of. I was sure that I wasn't going to write anything that seemed autobiographical. And then I did, and it was great. And now I'm thinking, what else are you sure you're not going to do? I'm sure that I'm not going to write a first-person novel again. Well, why not do that?"

     

    This article was originally published in the September 2016 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2016 BookPage Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2017 May
    Book clubs: The mother lode

    The Nix, Nathan Hill's smart, darkly humorous debut, is the tale of Samuel Andresen-Anderson, an unmotivated English professor who was once a successful writer. Samuel's mother, Faye, walked out on the family when he was a kid, and he hasn't seen her since. When she's charged with a surprising crime involving a politician—an act that attracts the attention of the national media—Samuel is more than a little surprised. Portrayed as a revolutionary, the Faye of today is nothing like the conventional woman he knew years ago. Samuel's life takes an unexpected turn after he decides to help his mother—a choice he hopes will result in material for a new book. As he delves into Faye's background and finds out more about her, he comes to realize that he never really knew her at all. Hill navigates between the past and the present with skill, presenting scenes from Faye's life in the 1960s that are richly authentic. This is a timely, resonant novel from a writer on the rise.

    FAMILY MATTERS
    Commonwealth has it all—a compelling plot, convincing characters and an insightful approach to story­telling. Spanning 50 years, Ann Patchett's poignant exploration of family relationships opens in the 1960s, at a party in California, where Bert Cousins—drunk and dauntless—breaks up the marriage of Beverly Keating. The two go on to tie the knot and settle in Virginia, forcing their combined group of six stepkids into a new living situation. Patchett chronicles the ways in which the domestic reconfiguration influences family members, including Beverly's daughter, Franny. When Franny shares the story of her early years with her lover, the novelist Leon Posen, he uses it as the foundation for his new book—a runaway hit that makes the family face up to its past. This exploration of the risks of romance and the consequences of rash acts makes for a captivating read. With this novel—her seventh and most autobiographical—Patchett continues to prove that she's one of the best writers working today.

    TOP PICK FOR BOOK CLUBS
    One of the most acclaimed debuts of 2016, Yaa Gyasi's ­Homegoing is a powerful novel that chronicles the lives of Effia and Esi, two lovely half-sisters who aren't aware of one another, and whose fates in 1700s Ghana are drastically different. Effia is sold by her father to British governor James Collins, who takes her to a castle where she leads a comfortable life. Esi, meanwhile, is kept in the castle's dismal dungeon waiting to be shipped as a slave to the New World. The contrast between the women's lives creates a compelling reading experience. As the novel progresses, Gyasi introduces new generations of the sisters' families, working up to modern-day Harlem. Demonstrating remarkable facility as a writer, she shifts scenes and eras with ease. This is an important debut that will provide book clubs with plenty of talking points.

    This article was originally published in the May 2017 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2017 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2016 June #2
    Two families are fused, atomized, and reconfigured by a stolen kiss, a child's death, and a bestselling novel.In her seventh work of fiction, Patchett (This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage, 2013, etc.) turns from the exotic locales and premises of Bel Canto (2001) and State of Wonder (2011) to a subject closer to home: the evolution of an American family over five decades. The story begins on a very hot day in Southern California at a christening party for Beverly and Fix Keating's second daughter, Franny. A lawyer named Bert Cousins shows up uninvited, carrying a bottle of gin. With its help, the instant infatuation he conceives for his stunning hostess becomes "the start of his life." After Bert and Beverly marry and move to Virginia, the six newly minted stepsiblings are dragged unhappily into new relationships and settings. On another hot afternoon, one of the children dies from a bee sting—a tragedy compounded by long-kept secrets and lies. Jumping ahead, we find Franny in her late 20s, having an affair with a Saul Bellow-type novelist 32 years her senior. "Other than the difference in their ages, and the fact that he had an estranged wife, and had written a novel about her family which in its final form made her want to retch even though she had found it nothing less than thrilling when he was working on it, Franny and Leo were great." Since Patchett comes from a blended family with the same outlines as the one in this book, the problems created by Leo's fictionalized family history, also called Commonwealth, are particularly intriguing. The prose is lean and inviting, but the constant shifts in point of view, the peripatetic chronology, and the ever growing cast of characters will keep you on your toes.A satisfying meat-and-potatoes domestic novel from one of our finest writers. Copyright Kirkus 2016 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2016 April #1

    In this new novel by the beloved New York Times best-selling Patchett, Bert Cousins arrives uninvited at Franny Keating's christening party, recalling Sleeping Beauty's bad fairy and wreaking just as much havoc. He ends up kissing Franny's mother, Beverly, an act that eventually puts paid to both their marriages and joins the Cousins and Keating children in one big, genuinely affectionate bunch who look askance at their parents. When an adult Franny reveals her family's backstory to famed author Leon Posen, he turns it into a must-read book, which forces the siblings to reevaluate their lives together. With a 500,000-copy first printing and a 22-city tour.

    [Page 69]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2016 September #1
    Bert Cousins, a deputy DA in Southern California, takes a break from the claustrophobia of his home (three kids, including a baby, and a pregnant wife) and crashes the christening party for Franny, the baby of Fix Keating, a cop he barely knows. By the end of the day, drunken Bert has kissed Keating's beautiful wife, Beverly, thus setting in motion five decades of the two families reconstituting a time or two. The six children form uneasy bonds with one another and their various imperfect parental figures. Franny unwittingly blows open the heart of these messy alliances when a chance meeting with Leo, a famous, much older author, leads to a long love affair and a betrayal when Leo writes a blockbuster version of Franny's life story, made more raw by the death of one of her stepbrothers. VERDICT Award-winning author Patchett brings humanity, humor, and a disarming affection to lovable, struggling characters who soldier on with decency despite the handicaps of their disrupted childhoods. Irresistible. [See Prepub Alert, 3/7/16.]—Beth Andersen, formerly with Ann Arbor Dist. Lib., MI. Copyright 2016 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2016 May #2

    Patchett (State of Wonder) draws from personal experience for a funny, sad, and ultimately heart-wrenching family portrait: a collage of parents, children, stepchildren, siblings, and stepsiblings. In 1960s California, lawyer Bert Cousins divorces Teresa, leaving her to raise their four children alone; Beverly Keating divorces Fix, an L.A. cop; and Bert and Beverly marry and relocate to Virginia with Beverly and Fix's two children. Visiting arrangements result in an angry, resentful younger generation—rebellious Cal, frustrated Holly, practical Jeannette, littlest Albie, bossy Caroline, kind-hearted Franny—spending part of summer vacations together. Left unsupervised, Cal takes charge, imitating grown-ups by drinking and carrying a gun, until a fatal accident puts an end to shared vacations. Patchett follows the surviving children into adulthood, focusing on Franny, who confides to novelist Leo Posen stories of her childhood, including the secret behind the accident. Twenty years after that conversation, middle-aged with children and stepchildren of their own, Franny and Caroline take 83-year-old Fix to see the movie version of Leo's novel about their family. Patchett elegantly manages a varied cast of characters as alliances and animosities ebb and flow, cross-country and over time. Scenes of Franny and Leo in the Hamptons and Holly and Teresa at a Zen meditation center show her at her peak in humor, humanity, and understanding people in challenging situations. What's more challenging, after all, than a family like the Commonwealth of Virginia, made up of separate entities bound together by chance and history? (Sept.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2016 PWxyz LLC

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