Monday, February 28, 2022

Book Review - Ocean State; Stewart O'Nan

 

Ocean State; Stewart O'Nan
Dreamscape Media 3/15/2022 and Grove Press
Narrated by Sara Young 

"When I was in the eighth grade my sister helped kill another girl.  She was in love, my mother said, like it was an excuse.  She didn't know what she was doing.  I had never been in love then, not really, so I didn't know what my mother meant, but I do now. "

From the first lines of this short novel we know that a girl has been murdered and that the younger sister did not understand why this happened.

Ocean State takes place in 2009 in the blue collar town of Ashaway, Rhode Island (actual RI town).  What follows these jolting first sentences are the events that led up to this event and the fallout that resulted.  

The story is told from the POV of (4) female characters though a series of flashbacks and internal thoughts. Carol is a divorced single mother who works as a nurses aide while trying to raise her (2) teenage daughters. She is a woman who doesn't always make the best decisions. She drinks a bit too much and seems to jump from one man to another. Her daughters: Angel 16, is in high school - she is popular and hot-tempered.  Marie 13, adores her older sister but, she is lonely and has no real friends. She is bookish and feeds her emotions with food.  Birdy is a petite, brunette and is the high school girl who was murdered.

Myles is the good looking, popular, jock that Angel has been dating for three years.  Myles comes from a wealthier Rhode Island family and will soon be off to college. Angel by contrast works at CVS part time and has no college plans.  Deep down Angel knows that their relationship is not a forever one.  Myles has been seeing Birdy on the side and Angel eventually becomes aware of it. The sad thing is that both Angel and Birdy are in many ways quite alike, both crazy about a boy who isn't really worth fighting over.

Ocean State is a well-written and deep character study that gets to the heart of teenage jealousy and love triangles.  It's a story that focuses more on what led up to this tragedy and the aftermath of those left to sort it all out.  I found it hard to care about most of the character except for 13 year old Marie who I felt quite sorry for.  This novel is quite different from any of the author's previous books but, it was extremely well written.

I began listening to the audio book, narrated by Sara Young, who sounded like a teen which was appropriate for most of the characters. However,  I quickly became annoyed with the narration after she repeatedly mispronounced "Chariho", the school district and regional school the teens attended.  I felt like the audiobook narrator should have taken the time to research the correct pronunciation of places, since the author felt it important enough to use all actual Rhode Island places in this book.  I ended up switching to the eGalley making this short novel a combo read/listen. This book isn't really a mystery but, it is a very good story. I love the way this author has a real talent when it comes to describing the details of small town life and regular everyday people and their situations.

Rating - 4/5 stars

21 comments:

  1. Small towns can be very interesting settings for fiction. They are places where emotions can become quite fraught and lead to tragedy.

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    1. I LOVE small town fiction - Elizabeth Strout is a good one for that as well.

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  2. Ooooh, a book set on Rhode Island, and a mystery 'sort' of thing too. It sounds good and I need Rhode Island for my on-going US States challenge. Nice review, Diane.

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    1. Oh that's great Cath - I think this would work well. Ann Hood is a Rhode Island author I love. This book isn't a mystery but I liked it a lot. https://bibliophilebythesea.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-book-that-matters-most-ann-hood.html

      I also love her partial memoir type books. One about growing up in an Italian family in RI, another about growing up around books and references to books that changed her life.

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  3. It does sound like a better read than a listen, the error with the town name would be annoying!

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    1. Yes, it really bugs me when words are mispronounced on audio. This particular book is fairly short - fewer than 240 pages.

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  4. Teenagers, love triangles and tragedy. Yep. Those three things do seem to go together. ;)

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  5. Sounds good so I may add it to my list.

    I agree with you, it bothers me when a town is mispronounced. In a book I read the narrator kept saying Kiss a me for a town in Florida. The real pronunciation is Kiss m e. Another example is in the book Grandma Gatewood's Walk. The narrator kept pronouncing the city Gal o police, it's actually pronounced Gal a polis. That's the town my kids were born in.

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    1. Good examples Vicki, I'm glad it's not just me being too critical. In Ocean State, Chariho is the Regional School the school the teens
      attended.

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  6. I'll go with the print edition. Thanks for the heads-up about the narrator!

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    1. Yeah, I won't be seeking her out for other books she might have narrated.

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  7. That was a good introduction definitely.

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    1. Yes, these teenagers sometimes can really take young love to the extreme.

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  8. Hmm I'm a little on the fence about whether to pick it up but it seems short! So yes. It can be a bit jarring when words on audio are mispronounced. So e-book sounds the right way to go.

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    1. Susan, You might not even know that the place was continously mispronounced but, as someone very familiar with RI, I found it super annoying.

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  9. I've loved many of O'Nan's books and am planning to read this one. Mispronunciations, especially related to places I actually know, are a real audio pet peeve of mine... think I'll go for the print edition, too. Thanks for your review, Diane.

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    1. JoAnn, Glad I'm not the only one who feels that way about mispronunciations:) This is a pretty short book; well written but, not my favorite.

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  10. I used to read Stewart O'Nan books back awhile ago and then he fell off my radar. The Odds, Wish You Were Here, Last Night at the Lobster, The Good Wife, Snow Angels, and Night Country (I had to look these up on Goodreads because they were library books and I no longer have a reference for them). Now I see he has Ocean State and I'm eager to read that one.
    Unfortunately I had to skim over your review because I wanted to go into it cold. Thanks for reminding me of an author I used to enjoy.

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    1. Mia, I enjoyed his past books as well. I like the everyday people and families.

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  11. I think it's difficult to really love/enjoy a book when you don't or can't care about the characters.

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    1. Yes, sometimes it works out better when there is at least a good mystery behind it all. In this case I love Marie, the 13 y/o sister as I felt bad for her.

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