Cementville
By Paulette Livers
By Paulette Livers
By Paulette Livers
By Paulette Livers
Category: Military Fiction | Historical Fiction
Category: Military Fiction | Historical Fiction
-
$16.95
Mar 17, 2015 | ISBN 9781619024762
-
Mar 18, 2014 | ISBN 9781619022720
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
The Restless Wave
Ernest Hemingway: A Farewell to Arms & Other Writings 1927-1932 (LOA #384)
The Phantom Patrol
Trapeze
Tom Clancy Shadow State
Proud Sorrows
Devil’s Battle
W.E.B. Griffin Zero Option
Tom Clancy Weapons Grade
Praise
“With nods to not only Dickens but Nathaniel Hawthorne and Shirley Jackson too, Livers asserts the novel’s far–reaching intentions via her deployment of ornate, high–powered language. The thought–provoking debut wears its literary aspirations like a velvet funeral gown, calling attention to the grim legacies of combat and the changing realities of small–town U.S.A. As another bloody American entanglement staggers to a close, Cementville makes it clear that the consequences of warfare reverberate much further than on battlefields, for civilians as well as soldiers.” —Atlanta Journal Constitution
“1969 is often remembered as the summer of love, of Abbey Road and the flight to the moon. This book is about the realities of that time and by extension the realities we still live with. Unflinching and clear, and beautifully written, Cementville manages to be what good books always are: a window into the true world, exhilarating and inspiring even as it faces into the dark.” —Richard Bausch
“Cementville gave me everything I want in a novel. The place and time period come alive on the page, the characters are as real as all the people I know best, and I’m still thinking about them and their stories even though I finished the book several days ago. This is just simply a beautiful novel, and it could only be written by someone with a very large heart. I’ll be recommending it to everyone. Paulette Livers has made me feel that special thrill that I’ve never gotten from anything but great fiction.” —Steve Yarbrough, The Realm of Last Chances
“Paulette Livers is the real thing –a blazing talent with a fierce intelligence and a big heart, big enough to encompass a horrible tragedy and the inner life of an entire community. She has written a brilliant and deeply compassionate study of grief, violence, loneliness, and love. And her language sings. This is a stunning debut —a perfect novel with deep implications for our own time.” —Lee Smith, Guests on Earth
“Cementville is a tremendous debut novel. How Paulette Livers is able to maintain her light touch while taking on the era of the Vietnam War —with its seismic worldwide effects— is nothing short of genius. With its beautiful, wounded characters, its startling insights into their private hearts, and frequent flashes of humor, this book is one of the best novels I’ve read in a long while.” —Christine Sneed, Little Known Facts
“Paulette Livers paints a compelling portrait of a small Kentucky town, with its tragedies, pleasures, and crimes, with its fallen heroes, its agoraphobics, and its young lovers. Her prose crackles as it traces the uneasy lives of the folks of Cementville.” —Bonnie Jo Campbell, bestselling author of Once Upon a River
“What is central and valuable is the depiction of a specific and near–forgotten way of life. Through her strongly drawn characters, Livers depicts a community drawing on its traditional strengths—kindness, respect, and practicality—to support each other through the very new challenges presented by war, trauma, and suspicion. This novel will be enjoyed by fans of Marilynne Robinson and of lyrical novels that depict the awesome inner struggles and resources of seemingly everyday people.” —Booklist
“Long, lyrical chapters explore the wounds wrought on those left bereft
Livers uses each chapter to explore a different facet of war and its aftermath.” —Publishers Weekly
“The arrival of dead soldiers from Vietnam in 1969 upturns and rewires the lives in a small Kentucky town. An earnest and sober portrait of the homefront.” —Kirkus
“[a] gently paced evocation of a nearly forgotten time and place.” —Elle
“..Cementville could be any American town in 1969. The novel is a moving representation of the nation’s psychological state in that time of turmoil.” ——Real Simple
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In