Blame: A Novel
Selected Book Details
- Hardcover
- Edition: First Edition first Printing
- Author: Michelle Huneven
- Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- Release Date: September 2009
- ISBN-10: 0374114307
- ISBN-13: 9780374114305
- List Price: $25.00
Price Comparisons
E-mail these Cheap Book Prices to a friend!
| Store | Price | Condition | Free Shipping? | Online Coupons and Deals | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Half.com | $9.00 as of 11/21 2pm EST | Used | NO, $3.49 to $3.99 |
| |||
| Alibris | $12.95 as of 11/21 2pm EST | New | NO, $3.99 |
| |||
| Alibris | $12.99 as of 11/21 2pm EST | Used | NO, $3.99 |
| |||
| Amazon | $14.69 as of 11/21 2pm EST | Used | NO, $3.99 |
| |||
| Amazon | $14.70 as of 11/21 2pm EST | New | NO, $3.99 |
| |||
| Half.com | $15.39 as of 11/21 2pm EST | New | NO, $3.49 to $3.99 |
| |||
| Amazon | $16.50 as of 11/21 2pm EST | New | YES, spend $25+ |
| |||
| button not working? Click Here | |||||||
Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon
SummaryMichelle Huneven, Richard Russo once wrote, is “a writer of extraordinary and thrilling talent.” That talent explodes with her third book, Blame, a spellbinding novel of guilt and love, family and shame, sobriety and the lack of it, and the moral ambiguities that ensnare us all. The story: Patsy MacLemoore, a history professor in her late twenties with a brand-new Ph.D. from Berkeley and a wild streak, wakes up in jail—yet again—after another epic alcoholic blackout. “Okay, what’d I do?” she asks her lawyer and jailers. “I really don’t remember.” She adds, jokingly: “Did I kill someone?” In fact, two Jehovah’s Witnesses, a mother and daughter, are dead, run over in Patsy’s driveway. Patsy, who was driving with a revoked license, will spend the rest of her life—in prison, getting sober, finding a new community (and a husband) in AA—trying to atone for this unpardonable act. Then, decades later, another unimaginable piece of information turns up. For the reader, it is an electrifying moment, a joyous, fall-off-the-couch-with-surprise moment. For Patsy, it is more complicated. Blame must be reapportioned, her life reassessed. What does it mean that her life has been based on wrong assumptions? What can she cleave to? What must be relinquished? When Huneven’s first novel, Round Rock, was published, Valerie Miner, in the Los Angeles Times Book Review, celebrated Huneven’s “moral nerve, sharp wit and uncommon generosity.” The same spirit electrifies Blame. The novel crackles with life—and, like life, can leave you breathless. |
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
"You Took the First Drink. . . "
Michelle Huneven's "Blame" is a novel that is slow to get moving, but then it throws the reader into prison with the protagonist, Patsy, and after that, it's full speed ahead.
Patsy, a college professor, wakes up from an alcoholic blackout in jail, and jokingly asks, "What, did I kill someone?" She is convicted and sent to prison for vehicular manslaugter.
Her time in prison, her work in Malibu for a fire team, her slow, slow, slow rehabilitation make for a gritty, moving story. Her coterie of friends, from Gilles to Brice to Cal and Sarah, all have a place in her new life, if she will only let them in.
The first chapters seem to focus on Joey, the niece of her boozing buddy, Brice. If you can get through the opening with Joey and on to Patsy, "Blame" is a picture of AA, alcoholics, and redemption as well as of guilt, love, and loss.
Great character vehicle
At first, Michelle Huneven's new novel, BLAME, reminded me a lot of Stewart O'Nan. It sounded more like non-fiction. The author did not rely on plot points; things just sort of happened as they would in real life.
Patsy MacLemoore, a history professor with a drinking problem, goes to jail for killing two people with her car during a blackout. She takes responsibility for her actions, starts attending AA meetings daily, teaches reading in prison and wins early release by joining a fire-fighting team. The man whose wife and children she supposedly killed forgives her, and she contributes to his son's education.
When I read the summary on the cover, I wondered why the publishers would reveal the only twist in the whole book. Someone else was driving when Patsy supposedly hit that mother and daughter. But this book isn't about twists. It's about how Patsy deals with her guilt. I kept thinking that, like most alcoholics, Patsy would have at least one relapse or that she'd have an affair. Nope. She gets out of prison and keeps going to AA meetings, gets a job teaching ESL and eventually wins her college job back. And she marries the last person you'd think she would.
Perhaps the most interesting and funniest character in the book is Gilles, Patsy's husband's sister's kid. He's gay and he hooks up with Patsy's old boyfriend, who didn't know he was gay, although Patsy accused him of it often enough. Gilles winds Patsy like a clock. He throws away her funky shoes when she wears them to an art show; and he`s her main confidant. Gilles is also the saddest character in the book for reasons I will leave unsaid. When he goes, the book loses heart. Patsy becomes a whiner. She laments not having an affair with a colleague; she complains about her husband's inability to believe she was not guilty; she whines about her step daughter's taking over her house and her husband's reluctance to attend her Cambridge lectures.
In other words, Patsy is a neurotic, but that doesn't mean she's not a great character. She's so well-rounded I thought she'd bounce, and I liked her despite her faults. Read this novel if you're looking for something different, but don't expect any Jeffery Deaver-like twists.
Jehovah's Witnesses in Christmas Attire?
Oh, oh. Where was the editor when she/he came to page 35? Well, then again, where was Michelle Huneven in her knowledge of Jehovah's Witnesses? She got the Watchtower right. But it seems she missed out on why the two deceased "Witnesses"--downed by a drunken driver--would not have had their "professional" photograph taken (as in a WalMart one) in Christmas attire. So is this reason enough to rate the book with two stars you ask? Well, yes, if it makes a point because when I read a book I want to believe what I am reading. And fictionalizing Jehovah's Witnesses is just a bit more than this reader wants in a novel. As for the dialogue without quotation marks that another two-star-reviewer complained about, may I simply say this: it works very well and is more and more the trend. I like that.
Never pulled me in
"Blame" sounds like a great idea for a page-turning, thought provoking book. Patsy, a history professor, is an alcoholic and ends up killing a mother and a daughter. The book then follows her jail sentence, her getting sober, and how Patsy deals with life after she is released from jail. Then there's the big moment that changes everything about how Patsy and the reader thought had happened.
"Blame" should be an emotional and engaging book but I just never felt it. I felt the writing style was not easy to get involved the story. Some of the writing seemed awkard and seemed like it could be done differently and turned out better. I do think Michelle Huneven is a good writer, I just didn't connect with the writing like a reader should. I did enjoy the first part of the novel better than the second half. I think the suspension drew me in. Overall, it wasn't as good as I hoped it would be. But I do think that there are a lot of readers that will find "Blame" to be an excellent and thought-provoking read.
Uniquely engaging and thought provoking
This is the first novel I have read from Huneven and I loved it. Her beautiful and poetic description of both places and feelings made me long for her talent. I loved the way she portrayed the passage of time. Yes, the book is broken down into sections marked by dates but instead of this feeling like some big announcement to the next part, it did not interfere with the story at all. Time going by felt the same as it would in life. Early on in the story we meet the main character Patsy as a young woman with a serious problem. If this was to be the last time she appeared, I doubt she would have been liked by many readers even though her addictions were apparent. The Patsy we get to know over the course of the book is one of the finest characters I have ever read. We learn how decent a person she really is and just how insidious a monster her addiction was.
There is a twist at the end and like many readers, I had it figured out before it came so it is not at all like something you won't see coming but there is a scene that takes place at the end in a Shell station bathroom that was the perfect metaphor for what it really means to be imprisioned and how we choose to handle the way our lives turn out. Patsy learns this over and over again throughout the story. It seems imprisonment ends up meaning far more than time served in jail. The final scene also caught my eye because of the 3 people present. It was as if Patsy had come full circle in a sense.
This one is definitely worth the time.