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Something Red by Jennifer Gilmore (hardcover)
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When Jennifer Gilmore’s first novel, Golden Country, was
published, The New York Times Book Review called it "an
ingeniously plotted family yarn" and praised her as an author who
"enlivens the myth of the American Dream." Gilmore’s particular gift for
distilling history into a hugely satisfying, multigenerational family
story is taken to new levels in her second novel.
In Washington,
D.C., life inside the Goldstein home is as tumultuous as the shifting
landscape of the times. It is 1979, and Benjamin is heading off to
college and sixteen-year-old Vanessa is in the throes of a rocky
adolescence. Sharon, a caterer for the Washington elite, ventures into a
cultlike organization. And Dennis, whose government job often takes him
to Moscow, tries to live up to his father’s legacy as a union organizer
and community leader.
The rise of communism and the execution of
the Rosenbergs is history. The Cold War is waning, the soldiers who
fought in Vietnam have all come home, and Carter is president. The age
of protest has come and gone and yet each of the Goldsteins is forced to
confront the changes the new decade will bring and explore what it
really means to be a radical.
Something Red is
at once a poignant story of husbands and wives, parents and children,
activists and spies, and a masterfully built novel that unfurls with
suspense and humor.
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