Gift Cards!
Watermark Bestsellers
Watermark Bestsellers.
1. "The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Food From My Frontier" by Ree Drummond
2. "Fifty Shades of Grey" by E.L. James
3. "Moon Over Manifest" by Clare Vanderpool
4. "Fifty Shades Darker" by E.L. James
5. "Fifty Shades Freed" by E.L. James
6. "The Ex-Nun Poems" by Jeanine Hathaway
7. "Catching Fire" by Suzanne Collins
8. "Dovekeepers" by Alice Hoffman
9. "Radiating Like a Stone" edited by Myrne Roe
10. "Three Novels of New York" by Edith Wharton
Week ending 04/15/12
"At Last" by Edward St. Aubyn
A period of global economic turmoil may not the best time to read "At Last," the final novel of Edward St. Aubyn's superb quintet of novels chronicling the sort of aristocratic dissolution that Britain is famous for. Can anyone these days really understand or care about the troubles of a family who "had a good run," lasting "six generations with every single descendant... essentially idle?" But strip away all the money, and St. Aubyn's Melrose family--with its history of child abuse, rape, murder, addiction and bad marriage--still possesses a little something that touches almost everyone.
Although the first of the Melrose novels (1992's "Never Mind") began when Patrick Melrose was five years old, At Last provides enough background that it can easily stand on its own. The funeral of Patrick's mother, Eleanor, finally frees him from a lifetime of ambivalent feelings: hating her for abandoning him as a child to his abusive father, resenting the late-in-life irrational philanthropy that spurred her to give his "inheritance" to New Age shamans, but also desperately wanting her to be a real mother.
Eleanor Melrose's funeral is thinly attended by what's left of her family and friends, along with Patrick's ex-wife, his ex-girlfriend, his fellow AA confidants and two young sons. With easy balance, St. Aubyn moves the narration among the funeral guests, bringing respite from the often witty, often sardonic, but always perceptive musings of Patrick. He is the one who has suffered a lifetime of real family pain and has perhaps earned his resentment; but he is also the one who must accept who he is, "the inevitability of things being as they were," and decide what kind of parent and man he still could be. It is heartening that St. Aubyn ends his mostly disheartening, but also brilliant, Melrose cycle with a suggestion of hope.
Review by Bruce Jacobs
Buy a Book
Search Google eBooks
Upcoming Watermark Events
- Geraldine Brooks(1 day)
- Alex Grecian(14 days)
- Dorothy Wickenden(15 days)
- Laura Moriarty(29 days)
- Cheryl and Griffith Day(33 days)
- SLAG In-Store/Online Book Fair(199 days)
Hours & Whatnot
Location:
4701 East Douglas
Wichita, Kansas 67218
(316) 682-1181
E-mail:
books[at]watermarkbooks.com
cafe[at]watermarkbooks.com
Hours:
Monday - Friday: 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. (Cafe opens at 7:00 a.m.)
Saturday: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (Cafe opens at 7:00 a.m.)
Sunday: Closed.



