PROCESSING REQUEST...
BIBZ
 
Login
  Forgot Password?
Register Today Not registered yet?
  1 Is This Tomorrow: A Novel
Author: Leavitt, Caroline
 
Click for Large Image
Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3562
ISBN-13: 9781616200541
LCCN: 2012051162
Imprint: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Pub Date: 05/07/2013
Availability: Available
List: $14.95
  Trade Paper
Physical Description: 360 pages ; 21 cm. H 8.25", W 5.55", D 1.2", 0.82 lbs.
LC Series: Algonquin readers round table
Brodart Sources:
Bibliographies:
Awards: Library Journal Starred Reviews
Starred Reviews: Library Journal
TIPS Subjects: Domestic Fiction
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / General
FICTION / Historical / General
LC Subjects: Children, Crimes against, Fiction
Divorced mothers, Fiction
Domestic fiction
Suburbs, Massachusetts, Boston, History, 20th century, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Children, Fiction
Divorced mothers, Fiction
Domestic fiction
Suburbs, Boston (Mass.), History, Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
ONIX annotations | 02/12/2024
Leavitt's new novel, Days of Wonder, is coming April 23, 2024. Pre-order now! In 1956, Ava Lark rents a house with her twelve-year-old son, Lewis, in a desirable Boston suburb. Ava is beautiful, divorced, Jewish, and a working mom. She finds her neighbors less than welcoming. Lewis yearns for his absent father, befriending the only other fatherless kids: Jimmy and Rose. One afternoon, Jimmy goes missing. The neighborhood-in the throes of Cold War paranoia-seizes the opportunity to further ostracize Ava and her son. Years later, when Lewis and Rose reunite to untangle the final pieces of the tragic puzzle, they must decide: Should you tell the truth even if it hurts those you love, or should some secrets remain buried?
Starred Reviews:
Library Journal | 04/01/2013
Ava Lark, a divorced Jewish woman, and her 12-year-old son, Lewis, move into a WASPy 1950s Boston suburb only to be ostracized by their neighbors and sucked into a heart-wrenching ordeal. When Lewis's friend Jimmy goes missing, his disappearance has lifelong consequences for Ava, Lewis, and Rose, Jimmy's sister. By the time Lewis is in his twenties, he is estranged from his mother, while Rose has moved away and become a teacher. The truth of what happens to Jimmy comes out unexpectedly, forcing the three of them to confront truths they've long suppressed. VERDICT It's Harlan Coben visits the Eisenhower era as Leavitt (Pictures of You) sets out to portray a repressive society and the way it stifles a sympathetic heroine who is oblivious to the social ramifications of her string of former boyfriends. Although the backstory at times dissipates the tension, this tale of domestic suspense builds to a shocking climax and will appeal to anyone immersed in suburban lore. [Five-city author tour.]. J.L. Morin, Boston Univ. 368p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Journal Reviews
BookPage | 05/01/2013
Ava Lark is different. She's divorced, an unusual state of being in 1956, and one that the women at her part-time job and in her neighborhood treat as though it's a contagious disease. And she's Jewish, which leaves those same women feeling affronted when she declines to decorate for Christmas. Ava struggles to believe that she deserves a happy life, even years after her husband, Brian, left her for a mistress. She blames herself for his departure, as does their son, Lewis. Ava makes his life worse, Lewis believes, by not dressing or acting like other mothers, whose fear of anyone different is only exacerbated by the Cold War. Lewis' only solace is in his friends Rose and Jimmy, the other fatherless children on his suburban Boston street. After 12-year-old Jimmy vanishes, his sister Rose, at age 13, joins Ava and Lewis in shouldering the blame for a loss that isn't her fault. Rose's mother is convinced that if Rose had been with her brother that afternoon, he would still be around. Lewis likewise regrets not meeting his friend at the appointed time on that fateful day. Jimmy's disappearance leaves those who were close to him questioning who they are and what they know to be true--questions that continue to haunt them years later. Both Lewis and Rose have held people at arm's length, reluctant to let others into their lives for fear of sharing their past. Indeed, in Caroline Leavitt's 10th novel, Is This Tomorrow, the past colors each moment in the characters' present. As they attempt to discover what's behind Jimmy's disappearance and their resulting tumultuous lives, Rose, Lewis and Ava must retrace their steps to find understanding. Leavitt's compelling work explores how a tragedy casts a shadow--not only upon the days that immediately follow, but sometimes the rest of a life. Life isn't always what we expect, a fact that is thoughtfully explored in this beautifully rendered tale. Carla Jean Whitley. 384pg. BOOKPAGE, c2013.
Booklist | 05/01/2013
Leavitt has a way of crafting the loveliest novels out of tragedy. Like its predecessor, Pictures of You (2011), her latest work, set mainly in the 1950s, turns on a single fateful incident: the disappearance of 12-year-old Jimmy Rearson. Though Leavitt eventually reveals what happened to Jimmy, in a closure that provides little in the way of solace, it's her examination of loss, grief, and disappointment that will engross readers. Lewis, Jimmy's best friend, is already an angry loner, a child of divorce in a time and place where his mother, Ava, is viewed as a challenge to the natural order. Without Jimmy as a tether, he drifts aimlessly into adulthood. Rose, Jimmy's sister, is paralyzed by survivor's guilt: to move on without her brother feels tantamount to betrayal. The aching loneliness of these two is palpable. But Leavitt's most captivating creation is the mercurial Ava, an accidental trailblazer who refuses to deny her dreams. It is Ava, ultimately, who points the way forward, showing there's no shame in putting ghosts to rest. Wetli, Patty. 368p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Kirkus Reviews | 03/15/2013
Two troubled families--are there any other kind in Leavitt's novels (Pictures of You, 2011, etc.)?--grapple to cope with a 12-year-old boy's disappearance. Ava moved to Waltham, Mass., with her son Lewis after her divorce. Although her selfish husband, Brian, left them and Ava is working for a pittance at a plumbing company to support her son, the censorious neighbors disapprove of her dating and disdain her for being Jewish; in Leavitt's less-than-nuanced portrait, these suburbanites are virtual caricatures of 1950s anti-Semitism, sexism and anti-intellectualism. Lewis, told "not to be so smart" by his teachers, finds best friends in also-ostracized siblings Jimmy and Rose, whose widowed mother, Dot, is sort of nice to Ava. But when Jimmy vanishes one afternoon, ugly rumors circulate. Wasn't there something, well, strange about the boy's relationship with Ava? Or maybe Ava's new boyfriend, Jake--a jazz musician, so clearly no good--had something to do with the boy's disappearance. Jake can't take the pressure and splits. Ava, Lewis, Rose and Dot are traumatized in individual ways that don't necessarily draw them together, though Rose continues to pine unrequitedly for Lewis. Seven years later, in 1963, Lewis is a nurse's aide in Madison, obsessively caring for others but unable to share anything of himself. Orphaned Rose teaches third grade in Ann Arbor, freaking out any time she sees a child more than a few feet from adult supervision. Only Ava, still stuck at the plumbing company but baking magnificent pies in her spare time for a local cafe, seems to be rebuilding her life, when the discovery of Jimmy's remains forces everyone to face their unresolved issues. The mystery of what exactly happened to Jimmy is cleared up via not one, but two incredibly contrived revelations, and neither Lewis nor Rose is a vivid enough personality for readers to care much whether they'll ever get together. A moderately interesting story told in extremely broad strokes. 384pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 05/27/2013
Few events are as tragic as the loss of a child, especially when the circumstances are unclear. In Leavitt's story of 1950's suburbia, discord strikes when divorced working mother Ava Lark moves in. Although the neighborhood closes ranks against Ava, her 12-year old son Lewis finds two friends: Jimmy and Rose, siblings marginally more acceptable because their father is dead. When Jimmy dis-appears, a neighborhood gripped by the paranoia of the era mobilizes to search for Jimmy, but there are those who suspect Ava since Jimmy frequented her home. Already yearning for his father, Lewis withdraws into himself as Jimmy fails to materialize, and abandonment is complete when Rose and her mother move away. An eight-year temporal leap finds Lewis working at a hospital in a different state and Rose teaching elementary school, though neither remain in contact. Leavitt (Pictures of You), known for her ability to plumb the depths of human emotions, reveals the far-reaching effects of Jim-my's disappearance on the entire character of the neighborhood. Her real strength lies in her portrayal of grief's many manifestations in those most closely affected: Lewis, Rose, and the two mothers. Leavitt demonstrates through Lewis and Rose that without closure, the grief remains dormant yet re-tains its power. (May). 368p. Web-Exclusive Review. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
9781616200541,dl.it[0].title