Afbeelding van de auteur.

Keith MaillardBesprekingen

Auteur van Gloria

16 Werken 332 Leden 11 Besprekingen Favoriet van 3 leden

Besprekingen

Toon 11 van 11
The Clarinet Polka by Keith Maillard is Jimmy Koprowski's story. After serving a tour of duty during the Vietnam War, Jimmy returns home to the dying steel town of Raysburg, to the working class Polish-American neighborhood he grew up in. Despite being stationed on Guam for the duration, Jimmy still thinks he deserves a little break before getting started with his life. So he moves back into his attic bedroom, takes the job his father finds for him of working part-time at a small appliance repair shop and begins drinking in earnest. He has plans to go to Texas, but never quite gets going. He ends up involved in an unhealthy affair with an unstable married woman, and in his sister's attempts to put together an all-girl polka band.

This novel is rich with details about Polish-American life; from the food and the language, to the church and the history of the immigrants who settled in this corner of West Virginia, against the Oho river, and worked in the steel mills. One of the girls in the band has parents who were DPs, and the novel explores how this new wave of Polish immigrants fit in with the second and third generation immigrants, as well as what happened in eastern Poland during the war. The Vietnam War, along with the student protests are also a large part of the novel, as well as how the returning vets readjusted to ordinary life.

The Clarinet Polka is dense with information, but it never bogs down. Jimmy is interested in this stuff, so he makes it interesting for the reader. I found myself enjoying pages about the history of polka music, to the point where I more than once had to listen to some of it. I still don't like it at all, but I enjoyed learning about it - which isn't something I thought I would ever say. And Jimmy's story is interesting, too. He's a likable guy, slowly being taken over by his addiction, which was beautifully handled in the novel. All in all, The Clarinet Polka is a book well worth the time spent reading it.
 
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RidgewayGirl | 4 andere besprekingen | Dec 22, 2015 |
A man comes to terms with his brother's death that occurred years earlier while dealing with the unexpected death of his mother.
 
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phyllis.shepherd | Jan 11, 2015 |
One of the best books I've ever read. Gloria's voice & world are wholly absorbing & I felt everything she did. I was sad when it ended but I know I'll enjoy visiting her again one day.
 
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anissaannalise | 2 andere besprekingen | Jan 1, 2014 |
Let's call this "Instead of a Review, by Somebody Who Has Some Strong Reactions, But Not the Full Credentials to Write a Full Review". Like mainly, I bailed-out after 75 of the novel's 256 pages. The setting: "Raysburg" (read Wheeling), West Virginia, in December 1972 or 3. The situation: WVa-born Evan Carlyle, having fled the draft and built a new life in Canada, returns to his old home town to see his parents at Christmas. He makes many an excursion, some literal, some mental, down Memory Lane, most of them with his bitter high-school crony Alex Warner, stuck in WVa with a dying business, a deadening marriage, and a major bottle problem It's Bummer Theater at its most predictable. As a reader I want to learn something I didn't know already, if only that the teller of an otherwise predictable and taedious tell, can at-least do new or exciting things with language. Didn't happen here. Incidentally, or co-incidentally, the Publisher may have been showing some ambivalence about the book by doing a sloppy job of proof-reading: without looking, I found three typos in as many dozen pages.
 
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HarryMacDonald | Jul 15, 2013 |
Jimmy Kaprowski returns to his hometown of Raysburg, West Virginia following his deployment to Vietnam. He had never planned to return. Steel is the chief industry. There is a large Polish-American community. Unfortunately, I could not continue to read this book. It was one in which I did not feel a connection and the amount of profanity used by Jimmy and his friends was more than I was able to tolerate. I'm a little sad about this as I was really curious how he was going to incorporate the musical theme. At the point I abandoned it, we had earlier been introduced to Jimmy's sister who played piano well, loved polkas, and was learning to play trumpet. However, we had not been introduced to a clarinet player.
 
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thornton37814 | 4 andere besprekingen | Aug 20, 2011 |
SPOILER! i love this book. i started skimming over parts of thanksgiving with susie, and just couldn't handle the last scene with bill, skipped there too. i suppose it made sense that she ended the book in writing feverishly, i think, i skipped here too. i love the plain symbolism of the heat, the great storm, the nemesis bill, the last scene bringing gloria full circle again with boarding school.
i'm very fond of gloria. i like the secret watcher. and gloria is intensely likable, unperfect and yet, she is.
 
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bookscentlover | 2 andere besprekingen | Mar 21, 2011 |
The setting for this book is Raysburg, West Virginia. It is the 1969, and Raysburg is home to dying steel mills and a huge Polish-American population. The narrarator of this story is Jimmy Koprowski, who is recently returned from serving a stint in the military. The Vietnam War is raging on, but Jimmy never made it farther than Guam. He is now "re-integrating" back into civilian life. Jimmy lives at home with his steelworker father, stay-at-home mother, and sister Linda, who has what appears to be a useless music degree. Jimmy drinks, works at a TV repair shop, and drinks some more. Linda is teaching herself to play the trumpet, and her dream is to form an all-girl polka band. To help her out, Jimmy agrees to be band manager and eventually falls for one the band members, the clarinet player. A "bad match," at least at that time, is putting it lightly. There are numerous themes running through this book that keep the reader on his/her toes: the Vietnam war, the Holocaust, the '60s culture, alcoholism, what is is to be Polish-American, Catholicism. There is a happy ending, but there are some very dark spots getting there. Highly recommended.½
 
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CatieN | 4 andere besprekingen | Nov 11, 2009 |
Musicologist is transcribing a motet by a skilled but obscure 16th-C. Dutch composer and becomes absorbed in unravelling the secrets of the composer's life and faith. Lowinsky's Secret Chromatic Art in the Netherlands Motet is the, um, key. A very rich novel. (Bob Copeland)
 
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AMS_musicology | Aug 27, 2009 |
Keith Maillard has a significant talent and literary style. I chose this book after reading "Gloria," and found it to be totally enthralling. I know nothing about Polish immigrants, the polka or blue-collar communities in W.V., but Keith Maillard made them very accessible. At the end of this book, I knew the characters well through Maillard's exquisite rendering of them through their interactions and relationships with Danny, the main character. Don't overlook Maillard when you are looking for an excellent book that will strike many poignant chords.
 
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pdebolt | 4 andere besprekingen | Jun 9, 2008 |
This is a credible and fascinating glimpse into a world that probably no longer exists. The innocence of the '50s juxtaposed with the "sophisticated" main character is compelling. I found her mother to be equally interesting in her love/hate relationship with her daughter. Intelligence was evidently not a desirable attribute in a southern girl at that time, and Gloria's struggles with that make this an aborbing read. Gloria's conflicts with her inner and outer self and "the secret watcher" are worth a few second thoughts. Maillard is a very talented author.½
 
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pdebolt | 2 andere besprekingen | May 31, 2008 |
Toon 11 van 11