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The Bridge (2001)

di Doug Marlette

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1243221,137 (4.1)6
From the Pulitzer Prize-winning Doug Marlette comes a captivating story of family and forgiveness, of indomitable women and their courageous, headstrong men. It is the story of an enduring friendship, and of a bittersweet longing as old as Shakespeare and as contemporary as today's headlines. Pick Cantrell is a successful newspaper cartoonist whose career has hit the skids. Fired from his job in New York and in the grip of a midlife meltdown, he returns with his wife and son to a small North Carolina town, where he confronts the ghosts of his past in the form of the family matriarch and his boyhood nemesis, Mama Lucy. While attempting to renovate an old house and repair his damaged marriage, Pick discovers his family's ties to the historic home and his own connection to a place he belonged to long before it ever belonged to him. What follows is an extraordinary story within a story, as Pick uncovers startling truths about himself and about the role his grandmother played in the tragic general textile strike Of 1934, one of the least-known major events of American history. Moving from the frontlines of New York City publishing to the storied backroads of the old South, The Bridge is a sweeping and poignant tale of love and betrayal, forbidden passions and longburied secrets, of a man's struggle with his heritage and with himself. And the ancient bridge where past and present meet. A novel both comic and tragic-and written with the same wit, insight, and unflinching honesty Marlette has long brought to his prizewinning cartoons -- The Bridge explores how much we ever really know about others, and, most important, about ourselves.… (altro)
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Really loved the grandma, Mama Lucy, with her feisty attitude toward her family, her previous life during the strike. Pick was a interesting type of person holding attitudes from his past, his not understanding why his mother was taken from his home, blaming Mama Lucy for his childhood version of life. Enjoyed his humor as a cartoonist, the hill-billy behavior of his relatives was almost too cliche. Amazing how his new home became an aspect of the past. Enjoyed the connection to real life events from NC, his descriptions fit the area. ( )
  kshydog | Dec 13, 2020 |
Pick Cantrell is a Pulitzer-winning editorial cartoonist, who has moved from his native central NC to NYC. When he punches out his obnoxious boss and loses his job, his wife insists on moving them back to NC. Pick must now deal with his huge extended family, especially his grandmother, Mama Lucy. Over time he learns of his family's role in events of the 1930s, when mill owners' treatment of employees led to the labor movement. The story moves back and forth between the present recollections of the thirties. Pick's relationships with his grandmother, his wife, and others are affected.

Marlette's story is thorough in its detail and requires a steady, unrushed pace of reading after the first chapter. It rewards patience with insight and a fulfilling story that involves repeated revelations and recasting of the historical context. The ending is almost too sweet, but it worked for me because most of the characters have enough to them to interest me in their fates. ( )
1 vota Jim53 | Aug 26, 2014 |
Really excellent! There is so much history wound into this story of the southern textile mills and the uprisings by the unions for fair treatment. What makes it all even more interesting is the fact that Marlette's own family was such a part of the history and the main character, "Pick," is just what the author knows so well himself---a cartoonist. To my horror, I just looked him up and found that Marlette died in 2007 in a car crash---so sad. I'll look for his other novel, written in 2006. ( )
1 vota nyiper | Apr 8, 2014 |
Mostra 3 di 3
The Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist turns his kinetic powers of observation on familiar turf--the dysfunctional southern family--to bring us a portrait of reflection, resolution, and redemption that explosively transcends time and place to bridge generations and build legends. When editorial cartoonist Pick Cantrell returns home to rural North Carolina after destroying his fledgling big-city career, he has to do more than combat the personal demons that cost him his job. In the unlikely person of his 90-year-old grandmother, Mama Lucy, a diminutive spitfire who continues to dominate generations of Cantrells with her ironclad control, Pick confronts not only his past but hers as he exposes disturbing secrets that shaped a region and damaged a family. Seamlessly blending Lucy's oral history with Pick's contemporary crises, Marlette masterfully evokes the fierce familial bonds that can either devastate or liberate the human spirit. --Carol Haggas

aggiunto da kthomp25 | modificaBooklist, Carol Haggas
 

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From the Pulitzer Prize-winning Doug Marlette comes a captivating story of family and forgiveness, of indomitable women and their courageous, headstrong men. It is the story of an enduring friendship, and of a bittersweet longing as old as Shakespeare and as contemporary as today's headlines. Pick Cantrell is a successful newspaper cartoonist whose career has hit the skids. Fired from his job in New York and in the grip of a midlife meltdown, he returns with his wife and son to a small North Carolina town, where he confronts the ghosts of his past in the form of the family matriarch and his boyhood nemesis, Mama Lucy. While attempting to renovate an old house and repair his damaged marriage, Pick discovers his family's ties to the historic home and his own connection to a place he belonged to long before it ever belonged to him. What follows is an extraordinary story within a story, as Pick uncovers startling truths about himself and about the role his grandmother played in the tragic general textile strike Of 1934, one of the least-known major events of American history. Moving from the frontlines of New York City publishing to the storied backroads of the old South, The Bridge is a sweeping and poignant tale of love and betrayal, forbidden passions and longburied secrets, of a man's struggle with his heritage and with himself. And the ancient bridge where past and present meet. A novel both comic and tragic-and written with the same wit, insight, and unflinching honesty Marlette has long brought to his prizewinning cartoons -- The Bridge explores how much we ever really know about others, and, most important, about ourselves.

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