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That Night (1999)

That Night (1999)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.56 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0385333307 (ISBN13: 9780385333306)
Language
English
Publisher
dial press trade paperback

About book That Night (1999)

I had wanted to read this book for a long time, mainly because I saw the movie as a child and I loved it. The book is so different from the movie, it's like two completely different stories. Unfortunately, I liked the movie better.The book deals with teenage Sheryl and her greaser boyfriend Rick. When Sheryl realizes that she's pregnant, her mother immediately ships her off to relatives in Ohio to await the birth of her baby. Sheryl doesn't get to say goodbye to Rick. That Night deals with the aftermath of what happened after Sheryl left town. Rick enlists his friends to go to Sheryl's house the day after she leaves. Rick and his friends drive past Sheryl's house multiple times before finally parking. Because of the multiple drive-by's- the neighborhood men got concerned and all congregated on their lawns. When Rick and his friends finally parked, and Rick dragged Sheryl's mother out of the house, a fight ensued between the hoods, and the neighborhood men. This book circles around a lot, going from the narrator's own life and her perspective on the neighborhood, to Sheryl and what she is going through, including Sheryl's father's untimely and unexpected death. Part of what I hated so much about this book is that there were sentences that made no sense. Also, the lack of punctuation bothered me. There were commas where there shouldn't have been commas, and places where commas were desperately needed. Example: "Let's eat grandma"! As opposed to "Let's eat, grandma"! Sentences like that were prominent in this book.This was also very boring. It was very slow moving, and I felt like the author was focusing on that one night with the fight, but her description of that one incident didn't seem like enough to base an entire novel around. If Alice McDermott wanted to write a novel around one night, it should have been the night Sheryl got pregnant, since that night is the chain that links all the other events that happen in the book together.

I read McDermott's Charming Billy years ago, and even though I couldn't tell you a single plot point from that novel, after reading one page of That Night, I felt a familiar hush and tingle. McDermott writes the kind of sentences that make you want to linger and savor them - deliberately crafted, yet with an effortless feel. It's a quality of voice she shares with my wife, actually...As for the story, it reminded me a bit of The Virgin Suicides. Only the narrator of That Night is a woman who's remembering being just a kid in the neighborhood when the two main characters fall in love and get in Trouble. These star-crossed teens are as glamorous to the narrator as the Lisbon sisters were to the narrator of The Virgin Suicides, and this book pulls the same trick of imagining what their couplings are like, what must be going through the heads of these lovers as they sneak away to the park. These sequences are the most breathtaking, a pitch-perfect evocation of that age, that feeling of invincibility.What's most heartbreaking and brilliant about That Night is how it pivots from the kids to the parents, the parents' love of their kids sparking and echoing against the romantic love they're just discovering, starting the cycle over again... It's hard to describe, really, but McDermott captures the sad gaps and ultimate bonds between generations perfectly. When I finished That Night, I found myself thinking about my first girlfriend, and how my mom reacted to that, how amazing it seemed and yet, looking back, completely predictable, right on schedule... I suppose life oscillates between these two states all the time, but it's not often that the shift is glimpsed in a book.Anyway, I don't mean to go all purple. I highly recommend this one, especially for anyone who can be a bit nostalgic at times...

Do You like book That Night (1999)?

Found myself re-reading pages 35-55 and felt everything was too repeated, boring, and dazed. I did not enjoy this book at first. McDermott writes with really long sentences, using lots of commas and junctions from clause to clause. Then I decided to read this like a diary, and enjoy the long sentences. They're attempts to describe everything, from a person's perspective who sees almost everything there is to see. Views from one night in a small suburb, the events that led up to that night, and the course lives take way afterward. I discovered life-changing issues of pregnancy, parenting, neighborhoods, adolescence, sex, death, and growing up. I also found myself thinking about today's young adult lit, and how many of these issues are what are featured in young adult books, except it's not like this. There is too much delayed pain, too much learning about sex, too much struggling with parents, too much growing, and too much loss for That Night to be an actual young adult book. The themes are the same, but told from further away. I can't see young adults getting into this book, but maybe I'm wrong. Everything is seen much later than adolescence, yet captures so many teenager-specific moments. Sleeping overnight in a car, asking, "Can I go now?", and calling friends but speaking to parents. McDermott grasps for multiple ages to depict and succeeds. I loved the many stretches of boring suburban linkage, landscapes, and living - what connects much of this book together. And I always love distraught suburban details. Also the design of this book is superb, with THAT NIGHT spread across two pages on every folded out opening. McDermott's lengthy sentences look good in this thin-sized, full-timed volume.
—David Gallin-Parisi

Here and there something in this book resonated with me but only occasionally. Mostly, to me, this was a book of the bleak suburban life of American girls and women in the 1960s. I like to read about lives outside of my own experience (isn't that what many of us look for when we read?) but I just couldn't make myself care about any of the characters. Everything was grey and drab and was depressed by a sense of existential angst that their mundane lives could be jolted by the death of a loved one. I've been trying to place what exactly I don't like about this book and I think it's that in the world of the novel things are only ever terrible. There's no happiness and nothing is ever good. I don't mind a novel being depressing but for something like this I expect it to represent life a little more and even the worst lives have small glimmers of hope in them. One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich was cheerier than this. It's also worth pointing out that the men and the women in this book seemed like different species and for the men it usually felt like we were outside looking in as if they were aliens that happened to share a world with the narrator. Also, with the exception of two characters, nearly everyone (male or female) who has their appearance noted is said to be 'not good-looking.'
—Sahasrahla

While I may have given this three stars and not more, the way in which the book was written gave me pause and deserves kudos. McDermott focuses on the events surrounding one violent suburban night in which an entire neighborhood involves itself in the results of a teenage romance, the older generation meting out their own judgment upon the vainglorious and careless new while their children look on. Backstory and personal history are mere context to that one night, the actions of an hour, and those involved. The brawl serves as an excellent centerpiece- one night, one hour, a sort of study in suburban interruption which slowly reveals the depth of love and loss and absence held in each identical, stucco-and-siding house. The plot construction is, in this way, exquisite. The prose is very deliberate. McDermott's writing is usually graceful and sparse (see "Charming Billy", a pretty wonderful character study of a cheerfully miserable alcoholic) and "That Night" is no exception. The story reads at a nice pace, as well. Recommended as an interesting story in itself but also as a primer in building a narrative.
—Kayla Rae Whitaker

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