Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Tiny Americans

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the National Bestselling author of The Boat Runner comes a poignant, luminous novel that follows one family over decades and across the world—perfect for fans of the film Boyhood.

Western New York, 1978: Jamie, Lewis, and Connor Thurber watch their parents' destructive dance of loving, hating, and drinking. Terrance Thurber spends this year teaching his children about the natural world: they listen to the heartbeat of trees, track animal footprints, sleep under the star-filled sky. Despite these lessons, he doesn't show them how to survive without him. And when these seasons of trying and failing to quit booze and be a better man are over, Terrance is gone.

Alone with their artist mother, Catrin, the Thurber children are left to grapple with the anger they feel for the one parent who deserted them and a growing resentment for the one who didn't. As Catrin withdraws into her own world, Jamie throws herself into painting while her brothers smash out their rage in brutal, no-holds-barred football games with neighborhood kids. Once they can leave—Jamie for college, Lewis for the navy, and Connor for work—they don't look back.

But Terrance does. Crossing the country, sobering up, and starting over has left him with razor-sharp regret. Terrance doesn't know that Jamie, now an academic, inhabits an ever-shrinking circle of loneliness; that Lewis, a merchant marine, fears life on dry land; that Connor struggles to connect with the son he sees teetering on an all-too-familiar edge. He only knows that he has one last try to build a bridge, through the years, to his family.

Composed of a series of touchstone moments, Tiny Americans is a thrilling and bittersweet rendering of a family that, much like the tides, continues to come together and drift apart.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2018

      Deserted by their alcoholic father and raised by their increasingly beleaguered artist mother, the Thurber children battle resentment and finally leave home: Jamie for college and her brothers Lewis and Connor for the navy and the workplace, respectively. As each spins downward, their father, gone sober, reaches out. Following the nationally best-selling historical The Boat Runner; with a 50,000-copy paperback and 20,000-copy hardcover first printing.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2019
      A grim portrait of the forces that derail an American family whose members find that forgiveness might take much of a lifetime.By the time the three Thurber siblings are growing up in western New York state in the late 1970s, the region's economic woes have bred poverty, toughness, and cruelty. Their parents' drinking leads to "fights that ripped us clean of our flesh and left only raw notes of nerve ends," says Jamie, the only daughter. The boys, Lewis and Connor, play a "violent, cruel sort of football." The mother, Catrin, is an artist whose "sadness haunted her." Her husband, Terrance, decides the only way he can save himself and the kids from his alcoholism is to leave. In chapters spanning the years 1978 to 2018 and narrated mostly by the siblings, Murphy (The Boat Runner, 2017, etc.) takes disconnected snapshots of lives scarred by brutality, broken marriages, loneliness, and misfortune. Lewis goes to sea for years, with the Navy and as a merchant mariner. Connor glimpses domestic normalcy, but birds keep smashing into his picture windows. Jamie's husband returns from military service badly wounded and then they lose a baby right after her birth. Terrance falls in love with a woman who is bipolar, and he's electrocuted while working, one of four nasty accidents that befall family members. He hopes he can use the financial settlement to persuade his children to visit him. There are gaps of several years between chapters and little to link them but brief references to a sibling or parent. The fragmentation is fitting but results in something that can feel more like a short story collection than a novel.The structure is challenging, and Murphy has a tendency to overwrite in fraught moments, a risk that comes from emotional honesty and trying to make the bleak eloquent.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2019
      Murphy's (The Boat Runner, 2017) mesmerizing second novel portrays the fractured lives of a family from western New York. Terrance and Catrin are alcoholics, and in the winter of 1978-79, they began to avoid each other entirely, according to Jamie, the oldest child, then 13. Finally, in 1985 Terrance pulled away and went west, where he got a job with a power company near Kalispell, Montana. Lewis was 17, Connor 16, and Jamie 20 and heading off to college. Murphy poignantly paints a picture of how deserted the boys felt, left in the debris of failed families. Over the years, Jamie becomes a philosophy professor, has a daughter, then divorces; Lewis travels the world in the navy; and Connor sells ball bearings, marries, has a son, and gets divorced. Meanwhile, Terrance lives in a cabin on 160 acres in the Bitterroot Mountains, where, after retirement, he creates huge bone sculptures from antlers and animal skeletons he finds on his land. It is here that the family finally reunites in an emotional and beautifully rendered denouement that readers will long remember.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading