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Average rating5
From New York Times bestselling author Joyce Maynard comes the eagerly anticipated follow-up to her beloved novel Count the Ways—a complex story of three generations of a family and its remarkable, resilient, indomitable matriarch, Eleanor. Following the death of her former husband, Cam, fifty-four-year-old Eleanor has moved back to the New Hampshire farm where they raised three children to care for their brain-injured son, Toby, now an adult. Toby’s older brother, Al, is married and living in Seattle with his wife; their sister, Ursula, lives in Vermont with her husband and two children. Although all appears stable, old resentments, anger, and bitterness simmer just beneath the surface. How the Light Gets In follows Eleanor and her family through fifteen years (2010 to 2024) as their story plays out against a uniquely American backdrop and the events that transform their world (climate change, the January 6th insurrection, school violence) and shape their lives (later-life love, parental alienation, steadfast friendship). With her trademark sensitivity and insight, Joyce Maynard paints an indelible portrait of characters both familiar and new making their way over rough, messy, and treacherous terrain to find their way to what is, for each, a place to call “home.”
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I appreciated the book's theme of moving from sorrow and self-loathing to acceptance about less than ideal family dynamics, but I wasn't thrilled about Maynard's decision to use a Sainted Disabled Person as the primary vehicle for the message. And while I agree with her politics, I found their inclusion in the book to be heavy-handed and off-putting. Maybe my distaste is a timing issue; it's less than three weeks before the end of the 2024 US presidential campaign, and I can't handle leisure reading that includes references to the 2016 election, Brett Kavanaugh, and January 6, 2021.