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America America: A Novel
America America: A Novel

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Author: Ethan Canin
Creator: Robertson Dean
Publisher: Random House Audio
Category: Book

List Price: $44.95
Buy New: $22.95
You Save: $22.00 (49%)



New (26) Used (14) from $9.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 38 reviews
Sales Rank: 605006

Format: Audiobook, Unabridged
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Unabridged
Number Of Items: 12
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 5.9 x 5 x 1.2

ISBN: 0739368494
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780739368497
ASIN: 0739368494

Publication Date: June 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Random House, 2008. CD. New in shrinkwrap. Unabridged on 12 CDs. FREE TRACKING on domestic orders and prompt, professional shipping.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - America America (Wheeler Large Print Book Series)
  • Kindle Edition - America America: A Novel
  • Hardcover - America America: A Novel
  • Audio Download - America America: A Novel (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - America America: A Novel

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
From Ethan Canin, bestselling author of The Palace Thief, comes a stunning novel, set in a small town during the Nixon era and today, about America and family, politics and tragedy, and the impact of fate on a young man’s life.

In the early 1970s, Corey Sifter, the son of working-class parents, becomes a yard boy on the grand estate of the powerful Metarey family. Soon, through the family’s generosity, he is a student at a private boarding school and an aide to the great New York senator Henry Bonwiller, who is running for president of the United States. Before long, Corey finds himself involved with one of the Metarey daughters as well, and he begins to leave behind the world of his upbringing. As the Bonwiller campaign gains momentum, Corey finds himself caught up in a complex web of events in which loyalty, politics, sex, and gratitude conflict with morality, love, and the truth.

America America
is a beautiful novel about America as it was and is, a remarkable exploration of how vanity, greatness, and tragedy combine to change history and fate.





Customer Reviews:   Read 33 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars And Crown Thy Good   July 9, 2008
 37 out of 42 found this review helpful

It is no accident that the author of this novel is a faculty member of the Iowa Writers' Workshop. America America is interesting in structure and style.

There are three elliptical story lines. All are narrated by Corey Sifter, a native of a small town in Western New York. One ellipse deals with Corey's working class youth in the early 1970s and his gradual absorption as family retainer to the Metareys, the local gentry. The second ellipse concerns Corey's adolescence and young adulthood as he breaks away from his small town roots. The third, set in 2006, involves Corey's adult life as a newspaper publisher resettled in his old hometown, reflecting on events of the past. The points at which these three ellipses intersect form the center of the story: the rise and the mystery surrounding the fall of a hometown politician who aspires to - and nearly does -- capture the 1972 Democratic Party nomination for President.

This structural device gives Corey the freedom to move backward and forward in time and to speak with mixed voices: naive and trusting teen, battle-scarred political veteran, mentoring journalist. We see his world as it was and as it has become, capturing the many nuances of the transition from twentieth century to the 21st. The triple narrative device, and the resultant shift from one perspective to another, also gives the author the opportunity to color in his portrait of the times one bit at a time, filling in his outlines and illuminating his narrative with unexpected strokes until the whole picture emerges on the page.

So what's the story about? It's about the presidential campaign, passingly. It's about work and ambition. It's about loyalty, to place and to person. It's about the freedom that wealth enables, and the responsibilities and tragedies that it imposes. It's about parents and their children, and the subtle inheritances that pass through generations. It's about character and integrity: their surprising appearances and their equally surprising absences.

This is not a beach book. For me it was a front porch rocking chair book. It also would make a good window seat during a summer thunderstorm book. Not all the questions raised are answered, and not all the characters are well understood. It's nice to have something to think about on warm summer nights.



4 out of 5 stars A serious, engaging story on the price of political life   June 30, 2008
 18 out of 19 found this review helpful

In a 2005 Washington Monthly essay entitled "Why Americans Can't Write Political Fiction," Christopher Lehmann laments the dearth of enduring works of literature that have as their subject democratic politics --- what he calls "the country's national epic." Robert Penn Warren's classic ALL THE KING'S MEN is likely the first that comes to mind, and for some the short stories and novels (THE CONGRESSMAN WHO LOVED FLAUBERT and ECHO HOUSE among the most noteworthy) of the grossly underappreciated Ward Just may follow close behind, and yet it's hardly a long list. In his latest novel, Ethan Canin takes a grab for this elusive brass ring. And while he doesn't quite attain it, he nonetheless has produced an admirable and appealing work.

Set in the small western New York town of Saline, AMERICA AMERICA weaves together two main threads: the story of Henry Bonwiller, a liberal senator from New York, who pursues the Democratic presidential nomination in 1972, only to be undone by his own arrogance and moral blindness, and the coming of age of Corey Sifter, a local teenager whose circumstance brings him into the orbit of Bonwiller's bright political sun.

Corey, the novel's narrator, is now the middle-aged publisher of the local newspaper viewing the story's principal events from a distance of 35 years, shortly after Bonwiller has died, his political career a distant memory. Corey is the only child of a plumber and homemaker, and in 1971, at age 16, he is hired to work part-time at Aberdeen West, the estate of the Metarey family, whose wealth helped to build the town's economy and whose benevolence now sustains it. Corey's arrival at the estate coincides with Bonwiller's decision to run for president, and the young man becomes a bystander as the campaign unfolds. As his role subtly shifts from that of a handyman for the Metareys to low-level campaign assistant, Corey slowly is exposed to political life in all its undeniable, adrenaline-filled appeal.

Liam Metarey, son of a ruthless, union-busting coal and lumber baron who emigrated from Scotland and established the family fortune, serves as Bonwiller's principal campaign adviser, as well as mentor and surrogate father to Corey. Metarey is the novel's moral center, tutoring Corey on the ways of the world and teaching him, if only indirectly, about the compromises that too often must be made in politics and in life. He's a man, as Corey describes him, "with unparalleled access to the world but who still somehow retained a sense of justice, and whose life was in large part measured by his gifts to the community."

Where Canin's novel ultimately disappoints is in its portrayal of Henry Bonwiller. We learn that he is an ardently anti-war, pro-union politician who is beloved by working class people like Corey's parents. Despite the compassion he displays in his political life, at his core is an ethical black hole that allows him to embark on an affair with JoEllen Charney, a small town beauty pageant winner and legal secretary some 25 years his junior. What's missing from the story is the perspective of a narrator with an ability to fully grasp Bonwiller's complexity; his power to inspire unswerving devotion in his followers while his life lurches toward self-destruction. Realistically, Corey is not privy to the backroom meetings between Metarey, Bonwiller and the campaign's advisers, and so his observations of Bonwiller's campaign are mostly filtered through the perceptions of Metarey, shared in frequent conversations with his protege. At best, the mature Corey is left to muse over his surprise that "mass politics is an emotional struggle above all, a primal battle that is more charismatic and animalistic than either ethical or reasoned," or how at times in politics "the ritual of deference precedes the auction of influence, and eventually the orgy of slaughter."

Everything about Canin's elegiac novel is ambitious, from the echoing words of its title to his willingness to embrace large themes --- class differences, politics and morality, ambition and failure --- to its generational sweep across a turbulent period of recent American history. Perhaps one of the problems such a talented writer encounters in crafting a political novel worthy of its subject matter lies in the intimacy anyone who watches CNN or MSNBC already feels to the process and those enmeshed in it. If Canin's effort falls just short, it's not for want of trying. AMERICA AMERICA is a serious, engaging story that may cause us in this election year to reflect more thoughtfully on the heavy price political life sometimes exacts from its practitioners.

--- Reviewed by Harvey Freedenberg



4 out of 5 stars American Machinations   June 24, 2008
 13 out of 15 found this review helpful

A novel about politics, small towns, family, and the inner-workings of all those things.

I am reminded of a blend between "All the King's Men" and "Brideshead Revisited". I am also reminded of the present.

The time is the early 1970s. There is a presidential election. People are tired of the U.S.'s presence in Vietnam. On the scene is Henry Bonwiller, a charismatic liberal who becomes a frontman for the democratic nomination. In Bonwiller, we see a political stooge, a mouthpiece of the smarter and purer-of-heart liberal capitalist Liam Metarey, who is Bonwiller's campaign manager. Bonwiller doesn't get the nomination: there is a tragedy, some gross errors of judgment. There are suggestions of the all too common missteps of high profile politicians over the last couple generations. The question is asked: what really happened. Who played what part in the events? Who was changed by events and how?

The message of hope and change during a time of profound societal disenchantment rings eerily familiar during our present election-time. The inner-workings of the political machine; the "right" person at the right time, the ebb and flow of support and media coverage: all of it fickle and haphazard and almost accidental. But inside that complex machinery are good, if imperfect, well-meaning people.

Narrated in first-person by Corey Sifter, now a newspaper publisher, but during Bonwillers presidential run, he was a young man of modest means, employed by the Metarey family, and an unwitting witness to an unfolding of a uniquely American drama.

I enjoyed the characters, the action, the story's momentum. Though it forced me to pay attention, I even liked the chronological shifts, the slow unfolding of the backstory, the stories of the lives of the people, another kind of complex machinery.



1 out of 5 stars A Tough, Torturous Read   August 5, 2008
 13 out of 20 found this review helpful

From John Howard Prin, author of Secret Keeping: Overcoming Hidden Habits and Addictions

What is all the hype about? I must be living on a different planet than the readers who love and admire this book. Barnes & Noble even calls AMERICA, AMERICA "unputdownable." Sorry, but I slogged through this overwritten tome and put it down many times, only to pick it up again because I kept thinking, "I must be missing something that others see, and appreciate, so clearly."

No such luck. I just finished the last page, having given the book every chance to win me over. As a reader of hundreds of novels (I'm in my 60s and a lifelong lover of fiction), it disappoints on every level but one. That level is Canin's word-for-word, line-by-line phrasing, which has a cadence and sensitivity that kept me involved in the early pages.

Aside from that exception, I regret to say that the storytelling is messy and meandering, jammed with too many subplots and characters. I was also put off by Canin's third-person point-of-view "memory" style of telling what happens rather than showing what happens (putting the reader in the scene), which is Rule #1 for fiction writers.

For starters, I stayed with the budding love story in the beginning pages between Corey, the main character, and Christian, one of two sisters, but that was rudely dropped about a third of the way through. Dozens of scenes later I learned that Corey had married one of the sisters (Christian?). That generated a mild level of suspense that I hoped would pay off, but much later still -- after describing his unnamed wife in snippets of third-person narration that held me at a distance -- Corey reveals her name is Clara (the second sister). Huh??? We learn nothing about why such a surprise occurred, nor does Canin let us observe the interactions of the three characters due to the "memory-style" narration that neither dramatizes nor explains.

Then there's the jumble of the main plot about Senator Bonwiller (at least I think it's the main plot, or is the main storyline about patriarch Liam Metarey's imposing influence on young Corey?). The Senator's story thread hangs on the Chappaquiddick-like scandal of young and sexy JoEllen Charney's untimely death while in a car with the drunk Senator. I found all this diffuse and repetitive. Other mushy plotlines centered on Corey's father and mother, and that of a young female journalism intern and her father. None of these tied together well and I struggled throughout to keep my suspension of disbelief alive.

By now you surely get the gist of my disappointment in this wishing-it-weren't-so review. I don't intend to trash Ethan Canin or his work -- really, I don't. Perhaps you'll be one of those 4-star or 5-star readers who live on some other planet, and I'm happy for you if you are. My hope is that everybody who invests the time to read a highly-acclaimed novel of 450 pages with such a lofty title is satisfied.



5 out of 5 stars America America the beautiful and brilliant   July 18, 2008
 12 out of 16 found this review helpful

It's hard to write about Ethan Canin's new novel America America without staring into space and sighing dreamily. I'm going to put it out there. If this doesn't turn out to be my favorite novel of 2008 I am going to shocked. Shocked and amazed. This book is so good that I have trouble finding the words to tell you about how good it is.

This is the kind of book that you get lost in. It takes you to another place and time so wholly that you will grow to resent all those things (eating, bathing, sleeping) that take you away from the book.

America America opens with the 2006 funeral of Senator Henry Bonwiller, a presidential contender in the 1972 race against Richard Nixon. Bonwiller's campaign was derailed by a Ted Kennedy Chappaquiddickesque accident that resulted in the death of a campaign aid. The funeral causes our narrator Corey Shifter to reflect on his time working with Bonwiller, and more importantly the man behind Bonwiller, Liam Metarey. It's a big, beautiful novel about journalism, politics, class, family, and, ultimately, America. It's brilliant.

This book is so good that when I finished it, I didn't want to start any other book because I know it's not going to be as good as America America. It's so good that sometimes I just walk past the book, run my fingers over the cover, and sigh happily and fondly remember all the good times we had together. And there are so many good times in this book.


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