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Tigers in Red Weather

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Nick and her cousin, Helena, have grown up sharing sultry summers at Tiger House,the old family estate on Martha's Vineyard. As WorldWar II ends, Helena leaves for Hollywood and a new marriage, while Nick is to be reunited with her young husband Hughes. Everything is about to change. Neither finds the life she had imagined, and as the years pass, the trips to Tiger House take on a new complexity. Then, on the brink of the 1960s, Nick's daughter Daisy and Helena's son Ed make a sinister discovery. It plunges the island's bright heat into private shadow and sends a depth-charge to the heart of the family.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from June 25, 2012
      Set in bucolic, hoity-toity post-WWII Martha’s Vineyard, this unnerving literary thriller from the great-great-great-granddaughter of Herman Melville finds a family unmoored by an unsolved murder in their apparently porcelain community. At the debut novel’s center are two woman, Nick and Helena, cousins who grew up spending summers at their family’s cushy lakeside estate. Once carefree girls, now jaded women, they’ve since returned to Tiger House with their families, but their lives have lost much of the rosy glow they had before the murder. Selfish and aloof, Nick can’t stay faithful to her husband, the devoted but emotionally stunted Hughes. Helena, living apart from her sycophantic filmmaker husband, prefers pills and booze to dealing with her poor excuse for a relationship. Meanwhile, Nick and Hughes’s surprisingly well-adjusted daughter, Daisy, is engaged to a man with not so subtle designs on her nearly acquiescent mother, while Ed, Daisy’s childhood confidant and Helena’s creepy son, is hell-bent on ensuring Daisy is treated with respect, no matter what the cost. Told from the biased and often unreliable perspectives of each of these five players, Klaussmann’s carefully crafted soap opera skillfully commingles mystery with melodrama, keeping readers guessing about what really happened until the end. While her characters’ duplicitous behavior will elicit strong reactions, Ed’s psychological progression is the most fascinating to watch. The shocking finale, seen through Ed’s all-knowing eyes, scintillates as much as it satisfies. Agent: Caroline Wood, the Felicity Bryan Agency.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Katherine Kellgren turns in a powerful performance, channeling the lives of the five principals in this compelling novel. The title, from Wallace Stevens's ÒDisillusionment of Ten O'Clock,Ó reflects the dramatic social changes America experienced after WWII, changes often leading to wrong choices, passionless marriages, and careless morality. As Nick, Kellgren assumes a devil-may-care Gatsby-era hollowness. As her tormented cousin, Helena, Kellgren becomes nervous and tentative, reflecting the disintegration of Helena's mind. Nick's daughter Daisy is the perfect ingénue, while her husband, Hughes, a veteran of the war, mirrors the period's uncertainty. Kellgren's most ominous character is Helena's son, Ed, whose flat affect suggests something dangerous. The combination of Liza Klaussman's insightful character studies and Kellgren's artistry makes this exploration of family dynamics engrossing listening. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine

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