“A shadow represents either the blocking out of light, or the other half of a person. When a character loses their shadow, they’ve lost part of themselves and have to search to get it back”.
I wasn’t going to cry… I wasn’t going to cry… I wasn’t going to cry…
“Hello Beautiful” ….is a BEAUTIFUL family saga novel.
A terrific juicy choice for book club discussions!
I just finished seconds ago. I will be back with a review soon.
REVIEW:
It must have taken a lot of energy to write this novel.
There are many sub-storylines that are held together by the complex and highly developed characters.
Ann Napolitano took her time carefully developing the characters and scenes.
They are richly drawn, distinct, and believable.
The actions of one character undoubtedly affected all the characters.
We look at the ways we choose to be, rather than believing we’ve been cut from a tainted cloth — scarred forever.
Even during my reading breaks — (as few as needed— while real life called for my
attention) —
I was still with this story — thinking about:
….William Waters: the focus male protagonist.
….The Padavano Sisters [Julia, Sylvie, and the twins: Cecelia and Emeline],
….Parents: Rose and Charlie Padavano,
….Alice, Izzy, (the babies born to Julia and Cecelia and their ‘coming-of-age’ development.
….Caroline: the 3 year old baby who died when William was born…shaping William’s life in unpredictable ways —
….Kent: William’s best friend
….and of course: I thought about:
….sibling closeness/and separateness
….choices made
….the ways in which a sport can (at least partially) save a soul.
….personality dispositions
….behavior differences
….depression & suicide attempts
…. Pregnancies, birth, and the challenges with ‘coming-of-age.
…. marriage, loyalties,
….betrayal
….secrets
….Etc. > lots of story-interest details that encompass this 400 page novel
AND ….
….I thought about
….LOVE:
….Different types of love:
Love that saves us from depression
Love that was hidden…
Love that was mistaken
Chosen love,
Love with conditions
Sibling love
Parental love
Friendship love
Innocent love
Tragic, unavoidable love
Prioritized love
Unbelievable surprising love—shocking love
Forgotten love and/or distant estranged love
voluminous love….
while sitting with this question ‘about’ love:
“Do you agree that we can choose ‘who’ we love?”
This novel touches us on many levels: emotionally — logically — and ethically.
The highly complex, flawed
characters found a way to sneak into my heart —they became conscious reminders of ethical behavior…..
through their interwoven
lives:
….sibling closeness/ and separateness
….choices made
….personality disposition ….behavior differences- ….betrayal
….secrets
….the profound grief and sadness
….freedom
….lost time
….lost love
….forgiveness-
….humanity in all shapes and forms.
The exploration of family traits — alone — and how those traits are passed on — is worth the cost of this novel itself.
I found myself totally immersed in not only each of the characters lives — but deeply engaged in thought about the ways our past affects our present and future lives. (so differently from one person to another).
If there is a book club discussion going around about this novel > I’d love to join in.
I hope they make another series of this book with the same passionate sensitivity they did “Dear Edward”.
Now for some excerpts:
— shouldn’t be spoilers — just out-of-context tasters:
“William, may have had no idea who he was, but the world had told him: He was a basketball player”.
By the time William entered high school, he was a good enough basketball player to start for the varsity team. He was five foot eight and played point guard.
This summer after William’s sophomore year, he grew five inches. He was six foot seven and extremely thin”
“William once had the thought that his fiancé (Julia) seemed to stride about the world with a conductor’s wand, while Sylvie brandished a book, and Cecelia, a paintbrush. Emeline, though, kept her hands free in order to be helpful or to pick up and soothe a neighborhood child”.
“Kent’s affection for William was too clear and too uncomplicated. It shone on William like the sun. No one has ever loved him unconditionally like this, and that love, when he was the most undeserving he’d ever been in his life, made William feel like he was burning up. He paste the room, trying to cool himself down with motion”.
“Do you love your life?
“Shit, yes. Kent said this with force”.
“William looked at his friend. Kent was still at his playing weight and seemed to glisten with youth and health. They were both twenty-three years old. William felt at least forty”.
“Julia had started to place her happiness in someone else’s hands, which was the remnant of her Chicago self.
Julia didn’t want to be that person anymore. In Chicago, she was part of the paper chain of Padavano sisters; they had never operated independently, and if one of them have a problem, they all had a problem”.
“Sylvie was no longer who she used to be, and she wasn’t yet whoever who she was becoming”.
“She was grateful that her father had prepared her for this type of hard, lonely ground. Because of him, Sylvie knew she could exist outside the boundaries of her past and future selves, for a little while, anyway. Even though it hurt. She understood now, though, why her father had tempered the brutal beauty of his kind of life—the kind of honesty—with alcohol, and why she had always been more comfortable in the library with books then in the world with people”.
There are dozen more excerpts I could include ….
but I’ll end with what I shared
and just add a few more thoughts:
There were many “I never thought I would” moments in this novel:
…never thought I’d leave Chicago.
…never thought Daddy would die.
… never thought Mama would move away.
….never thought Sylvie might be falling for Julia’s husband.
These ‘never thought I would’ moments allowed me - and all readers - to look into our own lives and be reminded of the many times ‘WE NEVER’ in a million years — thought we would —[fill in the blank]
The twists and turns of life can be so messy, and unpredictable.
Anything can throw us off our game.
So what to do?
Try to bask in the love, joy, and good things right in front of us —
“Hello Beautiful” is ‘family-saga-magnificent!!!!