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Off Keck Road

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this flawless novella, Mona Simpson turns her powers of observation toward characters who, unlike Ann and Adele August in her bestselling Anywhere but Here, choose to stay rather than go.
As a high school student in Green Bay, Bea Maxwell raised money for good causes; later, she became a successful real estate agent and an accomplished knitter. The one thing missing from her life is a romantic relationship. She soon settles comfortably into the role of stylish spinster and do-gooder. Woven into Bea's story are stories of other lifelong residents of Green Bay and the changes time brings to a town and its residents. This pure and simple work once again proves Mona Simpson one of the defining writers of her generation.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2000
      Simpson (Anywhere But Here) casts her net lightly over the reader in her fourth, uncharacteristically slim work of fiction, a novella, attempting to engage with a quiet plot about emotionally passive protagonists and the risk of staying disconnected. The narrative follows the lives of three women from 1956 to the present in Green Bay, Wis. Bea Maxwell, a practical, efficient woman, seems to have inherited the steadfast, can-do traits of earlier Midwestern heroines found in the landscapes of Willa Cather. The quintessential overachiever in high school, Bea is equally successful during a brief stint working for an advertising agency in Chicago. In terms of love or any risky emotional connection, however, Bea is somehow missing the boat, apparently by choice. She easily gives up her job and returns to Green Bay when her mother contracts rheumatoid arthritis. Once home, she is drawn to June Umberhum, a college friend who grew up off Keck Road. June has returned from an early marriage and is raising a daughter. Always a bit of a town rebel, June puts forth an effort to taste life, while Bea's desires remain submerged. Also telescoped into the neighborhood scene is Shelley, a Keck Road girl who contracted a mild case of polio as a child. The connections between these three women are gentle and unforced. They pass through the years in the eddies of their own interiors as their community expands around them, but the narrative hovers more than it grips. Simpson's signature fine writing renders subtle quirks of character gently and realistically, and she again finds fresh ways of capturing the familiar. Readers who enjoy the "day-in-the-average-life" tales of Anne Tyler will find a similar tone here. The appeal of Simpson's previous books should elicit a good initial response to this one, and her somewhat subdued plot structure may attract readers eager for reflective fiction. 40,000 first printing.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2000
      This slender little tale relates the story of Bea Maxwell, who stays rooted in the Wisconsin town where she grew up, and the ups and downs of her friends and family.

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2000
      Simpson's previous novels, including her best-loved book, " Any"where but Here (1986), chronicle quests and odysseys. Her newest, and most concentrated, is all about staying put. In the opening scene, her heroine, dutiful doctor's daughter Bea, comes home to Green Bay, Wisconsin, on winter break from school in 1956 and goes to pick up a friend, June Umberhum, who lives on Keck Road amid a cluster of rundown houses just outside the city limits. As Bea watches children running wild in the brilliant snow, she feels as though she's looking at a painting, "a Brueghel sparked to life." This moment is full of promise, which is both smothered and fulfilled in unforeseen ways over the course of this muted tale of four squeezed decades of small-town life, unexpected friendships, lowered expectations, and ritualized everydayness. Both Bea and June move back home after their brief forays out into the wider world: Bea to care for her ill mother, who frets that she did too good a job scaring her wholesome daughter away from men, and June to raise her daughter on her own. Then there's the indomitable Shelley, also of Keck Road, the last of the town's denizens to contract polio, and Bill, a wealthy, jazz-loving, and ebullient man who brings zest to their lives. As Simpson weaves together their meshed stories just like Bea knits her sweaters and throws, she pauses often to contemplate the beauty of the land as its disappears beneath the hard edges of subdivisions and malls, an internment emblematic of how love is buried deep in the hearts of her modest but strong characters, figures profound in their rootedness and dignity.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2000, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2004
      Readers who only know the city of Green Bay as the home of Vince Lombardi and Packers football will be pleasantly rewarded as Mona Simpson in OFF KECK ROAD (Vintage: Random. 2001. ISBN 0-375-70906-1. pap. $11), through details of setting and everyday occurrences, brings this place and her heroine Bea Maxwell to life.

      Copyright 2004 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2000
      This quiet novel from Simpson (Anywhere but Here), who never throws words and emotions around needlessly, follows the life of an ordinary woman from her teenaged years. Bea is in college when we first meet her, pulling up to new friend June's house "off Keck Road" in a sprightly little Wisconsin town in 1956. From there, we move back and forth in time, watching as Bea negotiates adolescence with the help of a class-conscious, fussy, slightly censorious mother who's only too pleased that her daughter is not the belle of the ball, through jobs, a quavering friendship with June, determined resistance to passes from a married man, and on to near retirement, still unmarried and an accomplished businesswoman--not what you would expect of the restless college student in the red Oldsmobile Holiday. Nothing momentous happens here, but events crowd through Bea's life, drawing in other townsfolk, and the whole story is beautifully rendered. Too low-key for some, but many readers will find this a joy. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/1/00.]--Barbara Hoffert, "Library Journal"

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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