The Ice Storm
Books | Fiction / Literary
3.5
Rick Moody
The national bestseller and basis for the Ang Lee film is a “powerful” novel of two troubled families during a blizzard in 1970s suburban Connecticut (Newsday). A potentially devastating blizzard approaches New Canaan, Connecticut, while internal forces of desire, frustration, and ennui threaten to tear apart two quintessentially affluent, suburban families. Elena Hood rightfully suspects her husband, Benjamin, is having an affair with neighbor Janey Williams, while Benjamin resents Elena and his mounting feelings of ineptitude. As the snow begins to fall, Benjamin and Elena, as well as Janey and her husband, attend a neighborhood “key party,” where they and other respectable suburbanites agree to go home with whomever’s keys they draw from a bowl. Meanwhile, the Hoods’ and Williams’s teenage children are caught up in their own experimentations with sex and drugs as they test the boundaries of their structured upbringing. With author Rick Moody’s sharp eye for the nuances of suburban life and allusions to 1970s America from Watergate to the Fantastic Four, the novel’s landscape is vivid and immersive. This timeless, unforgettable novel is a compassionate portrayal of flawed characters and reflects Rick Moody’s sharp eye for the contradictions of suburban life.This ebook features an illustrated biography of Rick Moody including rare images from the author’s personal collection.
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More Details:
Author
Rick Moody
Pages
288
Publisher
Open Road Media
Published Date
2015-11-10
ISBN
1504027671 9781504027670
Community ReviewsSee all
"Much like Fitzgerald before him, Moody tries to show the woes that afflict the affluent in a moving, realistic and tragic way. Charged with sexual undertones and exploits the reader follows the life of one family (the Hoods) through the span of 24 hours following the thanksgiving holiday. Set to the backdrop of a deadly blizzard hitting the suburban community of New Canaan, Connecticut the Hoods and their neighbors are breaking from the boredom of their lives with a key party which has recently become the “in” thing to do. Meanwhile their children are struggling in their own ways from the distant and detached way they are raised, shifting aimlessly in a world devoid of understanding and connection. The prose of the books is beautiful and makes you feel the emotionally cold atmosphere that is present in all four members of the family. You almost want to feel sorry for them, but you know that they do not really deserve your sympathy, they deserve what they get. Just because a family looks perfect and like it has everything it does not mean that it isn’t slowly rotting from the inside. Overall the book was written well and holds the same understated sense of impending destruction as Ang Lee's 1997 film."
"Painful, painful, painful! Maybe I'm just not high brow enough, or literate enough, but this book was painful, and not in a good way. It felt like it was trying so hard to be so deep but ended up just being so awful. When the best part of a book is the effect the electrocution of 14 year old boy has on his family and sorta kinda girlfriend, which mind you doesn't even happen until the last 40-50 pages? I almost masochistically want to see the movie now to see if it too is as dreadful as this book!"