I’m a fan of Anne Tyler’s quirky but very human characters who stumble their way over life’s hurdles, so it is no surprise that I added The Beginner’s Goodbye to The Accidental Tourist and Breathing Lessons as novels I have smiled and winced through.  I always recognize Tyler 
 “The strangest thing about my wife’s return from the dead was how other people reacted.”
 misled me to thinking Beginner’s Goodbye would be another Harvey 
Aaron Woolcott sees his deceased wife, Dorothy, in various spots around his Baltimore 
Anne Tyler introduces us to a host of characters, each quirky in some way and with some self-imposed shield of protection from life.  Even deceased Dorothy, by profession a doctor, is named after Dorothy of the Wizard of Oz and is not your usual MD.  
Quirky but also very human.  Aaron’s neighbors demonstrate something universal about how we feel when someone we know loses a loved one.  What are we to say?  Do we talk about that person or do we avoid talking about that person?  How do we act as time passes?  
Aaron knows he has to live through this, but he explains it so succinctly: 
“That was one of the worst things about losing your wife, I found: your wife is the very person you want to discuss it all with.”  What the “all” is doesn’t matter; all is everything.
The intriguing twists and turns of Anne Tyler’s plot kept me reading.  I got to know the characters well and could picture each one in all his/her strangeness.  I smiled, even laughed aloud on a few occasions.  I got choked up and even teary-eyed at other spots.  I wanted them all to find the way through their tribulations.
Because it is a fast read and a good one, it works well as a travel book, and I did Kindle it from our public library.  Oh yes, and it is a positive book about life and love and change.  You might want to look into that.  

 
1 comment:
Wendy,I have been a big fan of Ann Tyler's books since I read The Accidental Tourist in 1986. I like the way she does not sugar coat life.Your revue of this book makes me want to read it. Thanks
Post a Comment