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3.34 AVERAGE


I do like American novels with quirky characters and Suburban marriages but some parts of this book did feel like I was reading a man's erotic fantasy, especially the hot tub scene.
The characters were all stoners and neighbours yet very soon all living with each other and having sex with each other which didn't ring quite true. Some of the things Claire said about motherhood were quite apt though and she was probably my favourite character even if she was as messed up as the rest.
Throughout the book the weather was getting hotter and hotter and I was waiting for a big ending but did feel it fizzled out. Overall it wasn't a bad read.
Many thanks to NetGalley for giving me a chance to read this book.

Review to come.

Every time I think about this novel I come back and rate it one star lower.

Loved the book...hated the ending.

Excellent book. As someone who lived in Iowa for quite a while, the author does a masterful job of bringing a tale of mid-life discontent and longing to life in a wonderful place oft neglected in the pantheon of suburban discontent stories.

Highly enjoyable.

I wanted to like this book, but I just couldn't get into it. I kept forcing myself to trudge on, but eventually gave up.

great tale of marriage, sadness, and the midwest. funny at times and heartbreaking at others, the book explores what happens when potential is lost and all that is left is questions. it's definitely a quick read once you get into it, but that took me a while. i liked claire the most out of all the characters, but it is also easy to side with don, which makes the book a good exploration about the potential destruction of a marriage and how to save it. abc and charlie are less multi dimensional but it seems deliberate, making them more of a way to explore claire and don's problems, which was fine for me as i read.

I picked up this book because of its Grinnell, Iowa setting and origins. I got many chuckles out of references to the town and its neighbor, Des Moines, and I was engaged in the story of mid-life marital angst. There's not much to root for here though, and therefore nothing to celebrate at its conclusion.

Full review at: http://everydayiwritethebookblog.com/2015/08/summerlong-by-dean-bakopoulus/

Summerlong is about an odd love square (is that a thing?) that forms one hot summer in Grinnell, Iowa. Claire and Don are married, in their late 30s, and at a precipice in their marriage. Don, a realtor, has hidden their dire financial situation from his wife, and the two now face foreclosure on their house and an inevitable bankruptcy filing. Meanwhile, Charlie, an underemployed actor in his late 20s, is back in town to go through his father’s papers and prepare his house for sale after his father is moved to a nursing home with dementia. And ABC, a recent Grinnell graduate, has returned to her college town after the death of her best friend/lover, mired in grief.

One night, these characters interact in an unexpected way: Don comes across ABC lying in the grass, smoking pot, and joins her for an intimate but chaste evening of sleeping next to each other and getting stoned. Claire goes for a midnight run and meets Charlie in the parking lot of a convenience store, where they share an instant attraction. Over the course of the next 3 months, the characters couple off in a variety of combinations, sometimes consummating their attractions and sometimes not. Don and Claire’s marriage deteriorates until they decide to separate, while ABC floats along in her grief and depression and Charlie tries, unsuccessfully, to find his father’s missing manuscript and redeem his academic reputation.

I really didn’t like Summerlong. I did appreciate some of the insights into marital harmony and middle age that Bakopoulos infused into Claire and Don’s relationship. But I found the other relationships unrealistic and strange, and I had a really hard time with most of the dialogue in the book. I don’t think people talk to each other in real life like they do in Summerlong. Claire and Don were blunt and sharp to the point of meanness – do most married people act like that to each other?

Lots of drugs, lots of sex. I don’t have a problem with that, but they became a crutch for the author. These characters didn’t have much to say to each other or a genuine attraction, so he just had them get stoned and hook up. Problem solved! There are also too many unlikely coincidences.

There’s a feisty old grandmother type who says it like it is and eventually saves some of these doomed characters. Meh.

Didn’t these characters have ANYONE else to hang out with other than the other three?
Don and Claire’s kids – didn’t THEY find the whole setup kind of weird?
Why is Claire so angry all the time? And why hasn’t she worked for the last 10 years? For a feminist New Yorker, she sure depends on her man to make everything better.

These questions plagued me as I read Summerlong. I just didn’t get it. I know I am in the minority on this one – people seem to love this book. It just made me angry.

This book was excellent, but horribly depressing. It follows a couple as their marriage disintegrates over the course of a summer during the recession from a few years back. Do not read this if you are feeling insecure in any way about your finances or status with your significant other as this book will absolutely destroy you.