Names of Rivers Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Names of Rivers Book

With honesty and depth, Daniel Buckman creates a memorable account of trauma and loss with The Names of Rivers. Buckman's novel focuses on the Konicks, a broken family in a poor Illinois town whose nature and experience seem to lead them hopelessly toward misfortune. Patriarch Bruno Konick, an expert in obsolete crafts, lives a meager, largely isolated life, haunted by the horrors he witnessed as a soldier during World War II. His emotional distance and anger alienated him from his sons, who nonetheless followed him into military service and returned from the Vietnam War with similar psychological damage. Elder son Bruce, a violent alcoholic with a gruesome facial scar, harasses the townspeople and steals from his father. Memories of wartime atrocities, a long-standing heroin addiction, Bruce's childhood sexual assaults, and his father's neglect have left younger son Len a weakened shell of a man. Bruce's abandoned son, Luke, possesses an intelligence that offers him a possible escape from this familial cycle, but it's at odds with the aimlessness and resentment he inherited from his father and the limited options around him. Though troubling in its subject matter, Buckman's perceptive yet restrained characterizations offer The Names of Rivers resonance and poignancy. Brutally precise yet compassionate descriptions help convey the helplessness and regret of this gallery of displaced, lonely characters, lending the book's hard lessons a sense of disquieting accuracy. A persistently sad novel, The Names of Rivers rewards readers with the kind of wisdom gained from such a painful journey. --Ross DollRead More

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  • Product Description

    In a rustbelt town south of Chicago, three generations of Konick men attempt to assemble lives lived in the shadows of war. Bruno Konick is the patriarch, haunted by his actions during the World War II liberation of Dachau. His middle-aged sons, Bruce and Len, struggle for happiness while living with the disfiguring traumas of combat in Southeast Asia. Bruce’s son, Luke, is torn between the influences of father and grandfather, a precarious bridge between the aftershocks of violence and valor.

  • 0312314604
  • 9780312314606
  • Daniel Buckman
  • 1 September 2003
  • Picador USA
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 208
  • Reprint
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