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Northwest corner a novel  Cover Image E-book E-book

Northwest corner a novel

Summary: "A follow-up to Reservation Road finds 50-year-old Dwight Arno's new start in California thrown into turmoil by the unexpected arrival of college-age Sam, who is fleeing a devastating incident in his own life, a parallel struggle that dramatically transforms the lives of the women around them"--From publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780679605119 (electronic bk.)
  • ISBN: 0679605118 (electronic bk.)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
    1 online resource (285 p.)
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Random House, c2011.

Content descriptions

Source of Description Note:
Description based on print version record.
Subject: Families -- Fiction
Man-woman relationships -- Fiction
Fathers and sons -- Fiction
Life change events -- Fiction
Forgiveness -- Fiction
California -- Fiction
Genre: Psychological fiction.
Electronic books.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2011 May #1
    Twelve years after Dwight Arno has been released from prison for his involvement in a tragic hit-and-run that resulted in the death of a young boy (events detailed in Reservation Road, 1999), he has fashioned a new life for himself in sunny Santa Barbara, California. Yet every day he replays the events that forever altered the trajectory of his life and resulted in his estrangement from his own son. Then Sam, now a college student, shows up on his doorstep. Angry over a key loss in a championship baseball game, Sam became embroiled in a violent fight and seriously injured another man, who now lies in a coma in a Connecticut hospital. Wracked with guilt, Sam believes his father might be the only one who can truly understand his sudden troubled circumstances, yet Sam finds he is still not able to completely let go of his anger over losing his dad to prison. As the two try to forge a connection, Schwartz traces, in highly burnished prose, the fragile dynamics of a father-son relationship and the painful transformation of one family as it struggles to heal itself. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: This is the sequel to Schwartz's best-selling Reservation Road (1999), which was also made into a high-profile movie for which he wrote the screenplay; his latest will be pitched to book clubs and promoted via an author tour and online advertising. Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2011 August
    The mistakes of the fathers

    John Burnham Schwartz introduced readers to two Connecticut families inextricably bound by tragedy in his breakout novel Reservation Road (1999). In this sequel, which stands brilliantly on its own, he revisits those characters 12 years later. In the earlier novel, Dwight Arno left the scene of a hit-and-run accident resulting in the death of Josh Learner, a 10-year-old classmate of his son, Sam. He was disbarred, went to prison, and after his release, left his wife Ruth and Sam and moved across the country to Santa Barbara.

    Sam is now 22 and just a month away from his graduation from ­UConn when he gets in the middle of a bar fight after losing his final baseball game of the season. He drives his bat into his assailant’s stomach, sending him to the hospital. Sam flees to Santa Barbara, despite the years that have passed since he last saw his father—somehow sensing that only Dwight will understand his need to escape the shame and disgrace in which he is suddenly mired.

    In Northwest Corner, Schwartz delicately explores this broken father-son relationship, and how Dwight and Sam begin to reach out to one another—awkwardly at first, then with increasing empathy for the guilt and self-hatred each has experienced. Male characters are Schwartz’s forte, but his perceptive portrayal of Dwight’s ex-wife Ruth is also unerring, as he paints her gradual realization that, though she has been Sam’s primary caregiver and confidante for the last 12 years, in crisis he is drawn to his father: his comrade in shame. And in chapters written in the voices of Josh Learner’s mother Grace and sister Emma, Schwartz subtly depicts the ripple effects of Josh’s death throughout each of their lives.

    In short, finely honed chapters, Schwartz examines the state of mind of each of these wounded souls, drawing the reader into their fragile lives. This is a brilliant exposure of one modern family in moral crisis, a story that in some way touches each of us.

    Copyright 2011 BookPage Reviews.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2011 June #2

    A postgame bar fight leaves college baseball player Sam on the run and wondering whether he and his estranged father share a violent streak or at least bad judgment. His father, Dwight, can never make up for the accident that took a boy's life or repair his career or the family he left 12 years ago. Instead, he is going through the motions of starting over after serving his prison sentence until the day Sam arrives on his doorstep unannounced and troubled. In his fifth novel (after The Commoner), Schwartz explores the lives of characters damaged by circumstances and bad decisions, so it is gratifying when they move beyond crippling self-recrimination and begin their lives again. He adds depth to the characters he introduced in Reservation Road. VERDICT A well-crafted selection, ideal for readers with a taste for moral ambiguity. Readers of Reservation Road will enjoy continuing the stories of these two families, linked by tragedy, while those who haven't yet discovered this powerful writer are in for a treat.—Gwen Vredevoogd, Marymount Univ., Arlington, VA

    [Page 80]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2011 March #3

    The literary tradition of the middle-class American male as a creaky vessel teetering on the verge of moral meltdown yet struggling to reconstruct himself has found its latest and arguably most adept practitioner in Schwartz (Reservation Road). Like Johnny Hake and Harry Angstrom before him, Dwight Arno is a man who has done wrong. A Connecticut tax lawyer disbarred after a fatal hit and run accident, he does not expect a chance at redemption, but it arrives in the form of his son, Sam, who makes a mad dash across the country and shows up at his estranged father's front door after a vicious bar fight puts an end to his dreams of baseball stardom. Pontificating discourses masquerading as stream-of-consciousness mar the narrative at times and inject a sanctimonious streak, but Schwartz is otherwise exceptional at describing the chemistry of desire, creating emotional tension, and making his characters feel more like flesh and blood than fictional constructs. Imaginative and taut, Schwartz's writing is seamless and infinitely inspired. (July)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC
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