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  1 Kids These Days: A Novel
Author: Perry, Drew
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3616.E
ISBN-13: 9781616201715
LCCN: 2013024029
Imprint: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Pub Date: 01/14/2014
Availability: Out of Stock Indefinitely
List: $14.95
  Trade Paper
Physical Description: 311 pages ; 21 cm H 8.25", W 5.5", D 0.875", 0.11 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Bibliographies:
Awards:
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: General Fiction
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / General
LC Subjects: Domestic fiction
Fatherhood, Fiction
Florida, Fiction
Humorous fiction
Life change events, Fiction
Parenting, Fiction
SEARS Subjects:
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Publisher Annotations | 10/31/2013
In the spirit of Jonathan Tropper and Kevin Wilson, Drew Perry takes aim at the two sides of a man's impending fatherhood-abject terror and unconditional love. Walter and Alice are expecting their first baby, but their timing is a bit off: Alice has quit her job, and Walter, once a successful loan officer, has been unexpectedly downsized. They've had to relocate to Florida to live rent-free in Alice's deceased aunt's condo, and when Alice's brother-in-law Mid offers Walter a job, he can't refuse. But the things he doesn't know-about Mid's murky dealings and the secret arrangements of his shady small-business empire-are beginning to unnerve him. Tensions escalate until the day Mid's mysteriously procured bright yellow Camaro becomes the object of a police chase-with Walter riding shotgun. Drew Perry paints a landscape of weird, strange, beautiful Florida and its inhabitants-all wholly original, hilarious, and utterly believable. And at the center is a wonderfully sensitive portrait of a father-to-be who is filled with trepidation, paralyzed by the thought of taking responsibility for another human life when he won't even take responsibility for his own. 'Kids These Days' is a novel about a man who finally grows up-and just in time.
Journal Reviews
Booklist | 12/15/2013
In his lively sophomore novel, Perry (This Is Just Exactly Like You, 2010) recounts the misadventures of a former loan officer forced to confront the uncertainty of fatherhood in the wake of financial distress. Soon after he discovers that his wife, Alice, is pregnant with their first child, she subsequently quits her job, and Walter gets downsized from his. With no other options, the couple moves from Charlotte to a deceased relative's beachside condo in northern Florida, a transition Walter is as reluctant about as fatherhood. He hesitantly accepts a large check and vague employment from Alice's brother-in-law, Mid, a bon vivant and entrepreneur ready to leap at his next moneymaking endeavor. But what little structure Walter establishes topples when Mid briefly ends up behind bars, and Walter becomes the unlikely confidant of Mid's 15-year-old daughter, Olivia, who only baffles her parents as she comes of age. Perry's Florida is strange and intricate, as Walter obsesses over turtle hatchlings and a mysterious parachutist, and Perry's quick-witted observations and surprising plot twists unveil humor in adversity. Fullmer, Jonathan. 320p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Kirkus Reviews | 12/01/2013
Meet Walter and Alice. They're screwed. Perry (This Is Just Exactly Like You, 2010) follows up his poignant debut novel about a father and his autistic son with a lighter novel about impending fatherhood, Hiaasen-ian Floridians and the way life carries us forward whether we want it to or not. Walter and Alice used to have a fine life in North Carolina, stable enough that they began to tiptoe toward the idea of having children. "Yes, I told her, yes, which was not quite a lie: I could easily enough see us having a child, or children. I imagined we'd keep them fed and watered, that we'd find ways not to kill them, or ourselves," Walter muses. And then life carries them forward: Walter loses his job and Alice quits hers, and they move 500 miles south to a remote vacation condo south of Jacksonville owned by Alice's sister, Carolyn. Walter is soon drawn into working for Carolyn's husband, Mid, whose considerable wealth comes from owning things: real estate, sea kayak rentals, umbrella shops, a pizza place--all the strange accoutrements that adorn the beach to leech money away from tourists. Walter is talked into running the ice machine empire while he and Alice fumble their way through a difficult pregnancy. This is an interesting book with a slightly offbeat tone. Walter, who tells the story, makes for an amusing worrywart whose fish-out-of-water state becomes more and more obvious as Mid gets arrested and Walter begins to realize that he's become attached to a serious criminal. Even Mid feels bad: "I had something else pictured. Something calmer. Fewer police, fewer wayward children, you know?" There are some madcap elements here that recall the novels of Tim Dorsey or Laurence Shames, but the core story of Walter's family makes the enterprise feel closer to an Alexander Payne jaunt than anything else. A funny, frenzied tale of a terrified man plummeting helplessly into his own adulthood. 320pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Library Journal | 10/01/2013
Recently laid-off mortgage officer Walter (Walt) and pregnant wife Alice have moved into a Florida condo on loan from Alice's sister and brother-in-law, Mid. A job for Walt is part of the package as entrepreneur Mid begins grooming him to oversee his various operations--pizzeria, kayak rentals, ice-dispensing kiosks, and other ventures that may or may not be entirely "legit." Mid and wife Carolyn's teenage daughter, Olivia, bounces among her parents, her older boyfriend, and the condo as she "rebels" in her own rather surprisingly responsible way. As Walt begins to gain a clearer picture of the true nature and possible ramifications of Mid's business dealings and his growing apprehension at impending fatherhood, readers will feel his already shaky confidence giving way to an inertia that could lead to disaster. Perry's second novel (after This Is Just Exactly Like You) is a timely look at contemporary America, with its unexpected economic setbacks and the bargains made to surmount them. VERDICT Readers of Nick Hornby, Dave Eggers, and Jonathan Tropper should enjoy this compelling novel, the story of a man in transition that might also lure a few Florida fiction fans as well. Jennifer B. Stidham, Houston Community Coll. Northeast. 320p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 10/14/2013
Perry's uneven second novel (This Is Just Exactly Like You) plods aimlessly through a Florida landscape littered with narcissistic families whose lives are circling the drain. Walter and Alice's marriage is on the ropes--he's unemployed, she's pregnant, both are unsure that they want the baby. They've moved to Florida to start over in the shadow of Alice's sister, Carolyn, and her crooked husband, Mid, who is a master of the con, convincing Walter to work a shady job. Walter and Alice are suspicious of everything Mid says and does, but they are too weak to "just say no." When Mid is arrested for drug offenses and tax evasion, the cops--agents Friendly and Helpful--lean on him to become a police informer, and Mid's family life melts down in a puddle of self-pity, self-denial, and furious anger. Walter, Alice, Carolyn, and Mid make unbelievable, bad decisions, one after another, and they spend the rest of the time bickering. Surprisingly, Perry fails to resolve any of the conflicts, leaving the reader to wonder what just happened. The adults and kids in this disappointing story are corny caricatures of sad, shallow people. (Jan.). 320p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
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