The Good House by Ann Leary
I heard Ann Leary interviewed on NPR and immediately walked over to my local bookstore to purchase The Good House.
Book description: Hildy Good is a townie. A lifelong resident of an historic community on the rocky coast of Boston’s North Shore, she knows pretty much everything about everyone. Hildy is a descendant of one of the witches hung in nearby Salem, and is believed, by some, to have inherited psychic gifts. Not true, of course; she’s just good at reading people. Hildy is good at lots of things. A successful real-estate broker, mother and grandmother, her days are full. But her nights have become lonely ever since her daughters, convinced their mother was drinking too much, staged an intervention and sent her off to rehab. Now she’s in recovery—more or less.
Hildy Good is a beautifully flawed character – outspoken, rude, selfish, manipulative and generally unlovable – yet she faces each day with a fragile bbravado that touched my heart.
The storyline is a revolving tale of idiosyncratic characters, small town gossip, and an intriguing subplots – even including the Salem witch trials. Yet Ann Leary never allows the novel to get bogged down, she keeps every character clearly drawn, the dialogue crisp and each storyline adding to the momentum of the book. There’s a mix of pathos, humor, charm, and human insight.
While Hildy tries and convince herself, her neighbors, her daughters and even the reader that she doesn’t have a drinking problem, the author allows the reader to know better – the mark of a good writer is the ability to pull of an unreliable narrator without talking (writing) down to the reader.
A read this book in two days, and while the ending felt contrived, I delighted in the setting, every character interaction and plot twist.
I rarely save a novel for re-reading (I have my library of classics for that) but this went back on my shelf to savor again.