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Evenings At Five: A Novel And Five New Stories (2004)

Evenings at Five: A Novel and Five New Stories (2004)

Book Info

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Genre
Rating
3.5 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0345461037 (ISBN13: 9780345461032)
Language
English
Publisher
ballantine books

About book Evenings At Five: A Novel And Five New Stories (2004)

A writer, Christina, who relies on her visual capacities, finds that she can hear her composer husband's voice after he dies. He had consistently accused her of not listening to him during their private cocktail hour every evening at five o'clock; she was still living consciously in the world of story.In the months following his death, it's not Rudy's ghost that she sees, but his voice she hears. Christina is on a kind of psychological pilgrimage to discover "the secret with her name on it." At first she mistakes the five o'clock hour for the secret. Then perhaps it's Rudy's chair ... or the alcohol itself. She discovers the concept, "Absent in his presence, present in his absence."I've not lost a mate personally, and yet I found myself relating to Christina and her struggle to be present. I was touched profoundly by the story's message and moved by the beauty and poignancy of the writing. ("He who has ears to hear, let him hear.") It was spiritual and yet wholly committed to those of us who still walk this earth on our two feet and are subject to suffering. In my opinion, Evenings at Five is one of Godwin's best work.

I liked learning about sitting shiva, but otherwise I didn't really connect with this novel as much as I had hoped, as it was a little mired in the finality of death, and anyway the main female character's name is Christina, which automatically made me like it less, since I had problems with someone with a similar name growing up. Maybe if I had picked it up at a time of year when there could have been more sunlight I would have had a better time reading it, happier mood &c, but now this is not the case.It's just as well to read something that I don't love to make a loving commentary sound more valid and less like it's just what I say about every piece of processed tree.So, Gail Godwin's publication sounds like it's for an older audience than I am (25), but I kept to it to learn what she has to say about how older people react to the end of life in their friends. About the same as anyone else, it seems.

Do You like book Evenings At Five: A Novel And Five New Stories (2004)?

This is a touching tribute to a well lived marriage from the voice of the surviving spouse, Christina, who I gather is a not so subtle incarnation of the author. The cocktail hour clearly was a huge part of her marriage to a composer (in life and in art); I can relate as the cocktail hour played a huge part in my upbringing. It was the time of news and booze and witty conversation - even us kids got in on the act. The final of the five short stories is a moving account of the last visit between Christina and her mother. It moved me to tears and made me miss my mother even more.I love Gail Godwin as a novelist; this memoir gave me a window into her personal life. I liked what I saw.
—Susy

While this selection on Good Reads lists it as having five new stories...the one I read only had the story of Christina and Rudy. It was a super fast read...but one that leaves you with meaningful questions to ask yourself about your loved ones and what they mean to you.Christina and Rudy end each day with the Happy Hour...with Rudy mixing Christina's dring with precision. They sit across from each other and share an evening of conversation of things applying to their lives...she is an author and he a composer. Rudy unexpectedly dies and while coming to terms with her loss, Christina refelcts on their bond...with all it's quirks, habits and unexpected moments and asks herself "What did I think, that we had forever?" In trying to find her new place in life, she almost loses her grip on life itself along with her health.The lesson to be learned...appreciate, enjoy and never take for granted what/who you have in life!
—Debbie

While this may be a little book which is easily read in less than two hours, it manages to convey the importance of living large to the very end. I loved the older couple depicted - artistic, eccentric and vibrant. In life they both adored and exasperated each other, she a writer, he a composer. Every day at 5pm they sat down for a cocktail to discuss their respective days, with him usually carrying on about something or another. Grieving his loss after he's died, she continues their tradition in spite of his empty chair, desk, piano and cocktail glass. It sounds depressing, but it's not. Poignant and sad, of course, but surprisingly funny, too. This is a wonderful little read.
—Cathy

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