
The Ice Storm
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Narrado por:
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David DeSantos
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De:
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Rick Moody
The year is 1973. As a freak winter storm bears down on an exclusive, affluent suburb in Connecticut, cars skid out of control, men and women swap partners, and their children experiment with sex, drugs, and even suicide. Here two families, the Hoods and the Williamses, com face-to-face with the seething emotions behind the well-clipped lawns of their lives-in a novel widely hailed as a funny, acerbic, and moving hymn to a dazed and confused era of American life.
©2010 Rick Moody (P)2010 Audible, IncListeners also enjoyed...




















Interresting
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The Movie Adaptation is Better
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If you enjoyed the film adaptation listen to the audio version!
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My favorite character in The Ice Storm is 1973. The human characters are not exactly charismatic, not likable in any sense. They are interesting but they are too damaged and dysfunctional to relate to. But the setting is as much a character as the characters who people that setting -- New Canaan, Connecticut, on Thanksgiving, 1973. The tony suburban setting is crucial to where the characters are at the start of the book and where they end up after the events of the day (and night). But place is secondary to time -- 1973. If America "lost its innocence" in the wake of the Kennedy assassination in 1963, a decade later, in the wake of Nixon's Watergate scandal and the arrival of the sexual revolution in a buttoned up suburb, America's jaded and browbeaten heart and soul have completely frozen over.
I started college in the fall of 1973, leaving home at 18 to navigate a world in which a presidency was killing itself off with hubris, a world began its long slow burn with the oil embargo that followed the Yom Kippur War, my crime-ridden city (New York) was on the verge of bankruptcy (both literal and metaphorical), and culture was in the last stages of abandoning the utopian ideals of the 60s in favor of the dissolute self-absorption of the "Me Decade". I remember it well. Too well. Not very fondly. Rick Moody uses that moment in American social, cultural and political history, lashed both literally and metaphorically by a deadly ice storm, to recount the demise of the American family, both literally and metaphorically.
My favorite passages in the Ice Storm were the ones where the narrator steps away from the point of view of a particular character and riffs on a particular cultural element of the era -- politics, style, music, TV, comic books, religion, et.al. Had the book been written contemporaneously with its era, these references would surely feel dated. But looking back two decades, during its writing in the early 1990s, the commentary benefits from hindsight, from treating its material more as historical or cultural artifacts, as sociology.
Then there is the movie. Director Ang Lee is highly acclaimed for blockbusters like Life of Pi, Brokeback Mountain and Crouching Tiger, but before that he made small family-oriented films, of which The Ice Storm was the last. My memory of that movie made me want to read the source novel. The book has a different feel, with so much more interior monologue, the movie distinctly visual in style. Both are excellent in their own media, if you like it (my wife didn't like the movie, hated it in fact, and therefore has zero interest whatsoever in reading or listening to the book).
A Stark and Dormy Night
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Excellent, interesting novel!
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