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Anita Shreve, Sea Glass (Back Bay, 2003; Little, Brown & Co., 2004) |
Anita Shreve asserts herself as one of the foremost contemporary American authors of historical fiction with Sea Glass, an absorbing tale of two young newlyweds riding the waves of the Great Depression in New England. The novel focuses on Honora Willard, a young bankteller who marries Sexton Beecher, a charming typewriter salesman, and moves with him to a dilapidated house outside a New Hampshire coastal town. Honora settles into the role of dutiful wife with an inward trepidation that is lost in her husband's superficial view of her. Each chapter is told from the point of view of one of the five principal characters, a device that advances the plot while also offering insight into each individual. Shreve skillfully creates a sense of place, from the Beechers' stormtossed home to a seedy speakeasy to the stifling conditions of the local mills, while still formulating a compelling narrative. The brevity of each chapter might entice the reader to blow through half the book in one sitting, but a slightly more careful reading may be necessary to notice the subtleties Shreve weaves into each character and the story. - Rambles |