Ohio by Stephen Markley
This book had me so conflicted it took a few weeks of
digesting before I could comment on it.
I do love the book that makes me think about it when I’m not reading
it. This one should fill that bill for
you nicely. After a couple of weeks the
one word that surfaced was “stuck.”
I don’t know about you, but I left high school behind. Maybe
I’m wrong but decisions I made then and many of the people I knew then I left
back then. I don’t believe they influenced the rest of my life. Yes, I made lifelong friends, people I choose
to see still. But the whole experience was not something I go to reunions to
relive. It wasn’t my best time. The people in this book seemed to me to be
stuck.
Stuck in the decisions they made back in high school. Stuck remembering and trying to disavow or embrace
the relationships they had. Stuck in a
small town that died when September 11 happened to us all. Stuck and trying to unstick themselves. Stuck together.
One summer in 2013 four of those classmates converge again
in New Canaan, Ohio, each carrying the baggage they first took up in high
school. Bill had the high hopes and
dreams of an activist, now he finds himself carrying a strange package taped to
the bottom of his truck back to New Canaan, he doesn’t know what it is and
accepts the payment to carry it. He is
into drugs and alcohol now. Dan has done his duty three times in Iraq and is
home and trying to connect with his high school sweetheart. Stacey is back and finds herself sitting across
the table from the mother of her high school lover. Tina was ‘that’ girl. All of them are trying to connect the dots
that changed or rather affected their lives.
I couldn’t understand why they were stuck, because I wasn’t. But this is the generation who has never
known a country that wasn’t looking over its shoulder at terror, war,
fear. They’ve never known a federal
government that compromises, they’ve never known a country that at least tried
to get along and one that wasn’t struggling with economic recession – and they called
the bullseye home. If it was bad and it
was going to happen, it would happen in Ohio. Fling the net and they’re all
caught.
If you want a book that’s going to make you think, that’s
beautifully and thoughtfully written, that’s going to stick with you after you’ve
finished it and if you can get others to read it, a book you can discuss until the wee hours,
read this one. It isn’t fun, but it will stick with you. Promise.
I wish I could write a book review like you. So interesting and thoughtful.
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