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Vacationland

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available


On a lake in northernmost Minnesota, you might find Naledi Lodge—only two cabins still standing, its pathways now trodden mostly by memories. And there you might meet Meg, or the ghost of the girl she was, growing up under her grandfather's care in a world apart and a lifetime ago. Now an artist, Meg paints images "reflected across the mirrors of memory and water," much as the linked stories of Vacationland cast shimmering spells across distance and time.


Those whose paths have crossed at Naledi inhabit Vacationland: a man from nearby Hatchet Inlet who knew Meg back when, a Sarajevo refugee sponsored by two parishes who can't afford "their own refugee," aged sisters traveling to fulfill a fateful pact once made at the resort, a philandering ad man, a lonely Ojibwe stonemason, and a haiku-spouting girl rescued from a bog.


Sarah Stonich, whose work has been described as "unexpected and moving" by the Chicago Tribune and "a well-paced feast" by the Los Angeles Times, weaves these tales of love and loss, heartbreak and redemption into a rich novel of interconnected and disjointed lives. Vacationland is a moving portrait of a place—at once timeless and of the moment, composed of conflicting dreams and shared experience—and of the woman bound to it by legacy and sometimes longing, but not necessarily by choice.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 11, 2013
      A deluge of exposition drowns the many admirable moments in Stonich’s novel-in-stories. Each piece is connected by Naledi Lodge, a ruined fishing resort in the north of Minnesota, and the diverse characters who’ve stayed there. The book’s best moments occur when Stonich lets her descriptive prose capture the natural beauty of the landscape; but the bulk of the narrative is psychological, following characters as they contemplate the past, lamenting their struggles with love and mortality. Although Stonich is capable of writing convincingly in a wide range of voices—from the war-haunted Sarajevo refugee who tries to assimilate into the church and fishing culture, to aging sisters who make a difficult and terrible decision together—each story too quickly turns to exposition for momentum, pouring out unnecessary information and sapping the narrative force. When Stonich allows her characters a rare scene, her crackling dialogue and smart turns of phrase create more life than a dozen pages of exposition. Stonich’s new book (after These Granite Islands) has great moments, but they’re difficult to find.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2013
      Minnesota author Stonich (The Ice Chorus, 2005, etc.) draws a novel from 15 linked north-country stories. Naledi Lodge on Little Hatchet Lake is a now-faded Minnesota summer resort, a place of "water in all its incarnations--stream, swamp, puddle, or lake." Czech immigrant Vaclav Machutova ran the resort in its heyday. His orphaned granddaughter, Meg, spent summers there and winters in Chicago boarding schools. Stonich's lake-connected stories move through time from Meg's childhood onward, each story/chapter linked to Naledi Lodge like spokes to a hub. The book opens with adult Meg, a prominent artist, sketching a portfolio of a severed human hand brought home by her treasured wolflike dog. Then an advertising executive remembers a dalliance, a Lolita-like seduction. Adult sisters confront a euthanasia pact made after their mother's lingering death. A Balkan refugee, unable to penetrate the insular Scandinavian community, reconciles his isolation on the lake's quiet waters. Meg's citified gay cousin delivers Meg's mother's ashes and discovers a connection to family and place. One of the more affecting reoccurring characters is Ursa Olson, Vac's contemporary sometime-lover and a woman who prefers the hardy simplicity imposed by the inhospitable land. Ursa, defiant and self-reliant as her children plot to shift her from her cabin, finds comfort in one of Vac's lost journals. Readers also encounter a giant bull moose, deer silently drifting in a glade and empathetic characters--all rendered with compassionate insight and a gift for artful observation--including Polly, surrogate grandmother and science professor turned novelist; Alpo, trimming away at grief in topiary; one-dimensional Magda, who left Vac for a Third Reich functionary; Meg's father, Tomas, plunging to his death with his pregnant wife as an airplane crashes, "We will die, yes, but it'll be all right." Each chapter renders a story complete, and the stories together weave a deeply mined narrative of place and people, elegiac yet life-affirming.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 1, 2013
      Naledi Lodge, a near-abandoned lakeside resort set deep in northernmost Minnesota, now exists almost solely in the minds of those who crossed its rustic threshold. Meg, the granddaughter of the proprietor, currently splits her time between Minnesota and Chicago, painting lakeside scenes and wondering what has become of the summer residents she used to know so well. Vacationland is a novel of intersecting stories, including Meg's own. While each character shares Naledi Lodge as a common bond, some characters continue to connect in new and surprising ways long after their summer vacations have ended. With a diverse cast, including a philandering ad man, a pair of elderly sisters on a Kevorkian mission, an addiction counselor from a tony detox center, and a refugee from Sarajevo, Stonich displays formidable narrative skill. While the novel presents brief vignettes in the lives of several characters, each interconnected story is given its own true, clear voice. Vacationland is compelling, witty, and nuanced, an incredibly enjoyable glimpse inside the worlds of seemingly disparate individuals. For fans of Richard Russo and Margaret Atwood, this is a brilliantly engaging novel, focusing on the power of memory, new discoveries, and shared experiences. A triumph.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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