AYELET WALDMAN is the author of Daughter’s Keeper, Love and Other Impossible Pursuits, and the New York Times bestseller Bad Mother. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, New York, Elle, Vogue, and other publications, and on Salon.com. She and her husband, the novelist Michael Chabon, live in Berkeley, California, with their four children.
“Excellent. . . . A compelling, unique story. . . . Grabs the
reader right away.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“Lovely. . . . Memorable. . . . Waldman’s vivid writing makes the
reader feel a part of both the wildly beautiful Maine coast and two
families’ heart-crushing grief.” —Chicago Sun-Times
“Waldman writes beautifully. . . . [She] keeps her eyes on the
road, carrying us into dark territory with wisdom and grace.” —The
Washington Post
“You won’t be able to tear yourself away.” —Real Simple
“This beautiful novel shows us how families cope with the most
painful kinds of loss and reminds us that even as grief fractures,
it can pave the way for unexpected grace.” —Ann Packer, author of
The Dive from Clausen’s Pier and Songs Without Words
“Waldman knits [relationships] together with the pleasing symmetry
of a doily. . . . She also constructs an impressive parallel
between the vocations of shipbuilding and playing a stringed
instrument. . . . Readers will enjoy the ride.” —The New York Times
Book Review
“Articulately plumbs the depths of the parent-child bond with
clarity and intense feeling.” —USA Today
“Waldman writes with practiced skill. . . . It’s a love story, a
tragedy, a family saga, as well as a novel about class conflict
that pits two stubborn, controlling women against one another.”
—The Boston Globe
“Terrific. . . . Waldman’s prose style is lovely and fresh. . . .
This book made me happy, and happy to be alive.” —Pat Conroy,
Amazon.com Review
“With the careful attention of a movie director, Waldman renders a
panoramic scene of a wedding. . . . Lyrical descriptions.”
—Philadelphia Inquirer
“A handbook offering all the varieties of responding to loss. . . .
A literary puzzle with rich and emotional rewards. . . . Delicate
and insistent. . . . Red Hook Road proves life and art are worth
it.” —Bookslut
“[An] engagingly complex examination of two close families.” —O,
The Oprah Magazine
“Moving. . . . [A] wise and beautifully written book.”
—Downeast.com
“Searing. . . . All of the characters are acutely rendered. . . .
One of the pleasures of the book is in its detailed description of
work: boat building, boxing, teaching and learning music.
Sometimes, it suggests, what saves us is the work of our stubborn
hands.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Elegant and riveting. . . . A masterful imagining of the way a
single tragic event impacts the psyches and behaviors and dynamics
of two families.” —Kelly Korrigan, author of The Middle Place and
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