**A "beguiling and unnerving" novel of a young man haunted by an act of violence, from the award-winning author of *An Unfinished Season* (*Booklist*, starred review).** As a small-town boy in the early twentieth century, Lee Goodell learned about a brutal crimeβand the efforts of his father,
Rodin's Debutante
β Scribed by Just, Ward
- Book ID
- 107218499
- Publisher
- Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 150 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Tommy Ogden, a Gatsbyesque character living in a mansion outside robber-baron-era Chicago, declines to give his wife the money to commission a bust of herself from the French master Rodin and announces instead his intention to endow a boys' school. Ogden's decision reverberates years later in the life of Lee Goodell, whose coming of age is at the heart of Ward Just's emotionally potent new novel.
Lee's life decisions--to become a sculptor, to sojourn in the mean streets of the South Side, to marry into the haute-intellectual culture of Hyde Park--play out against the crude glamour of midcentury Chicago. Just's signature skill of conveying emotional heft with few words is put into play as Lee confronts the meaning of his four years at Ogden Hall School under the purview, in the school library, of a bust known as Rodin's Debutante. And, especially, as he meets again a childhood friend, the victim of a brutal sexual assault of which she has no memory. It was a crime...
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**A "beguiling and unnerving" novel of a young man haunted by an act of violence, from the award-winning author of *An Unfinished Season* (*Booklist*, starred review).** As a small-town boy in the early twentieth century, Lee Goodell learned about a brutal crimeβand the efforts of his father,
Tommy Ogden, a Gatsbyesque character living in a mansion outside robber-baron-era Chicago, declines to give his wife the money to commission a bust of herself from the French master Rodin and announces instead his intention to endow a boys' school. Ogden's decision reverberates years later in the li
Tommy Ogden, a Gatsbyesque character living in a mansion outside robber-baron-era Chicago, declines to give his wife the money to commission a bust of herself from the French master Rodin and announces instead his intention to endow a boys' school. Ogden's decision reverberates years later in the li