
We Were the Mulvaneys
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Narrated by:
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Scott Shina
Author of 27 novels, Joyce Carol Oates has won a National Book Award and the PEN/Malamud Award. She has been nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Readers around the world marvel at her ability to trace the subtle dynamics at work in the modern American family.
Judd is the youngest of the four Mulvaney children - three boys and a girl - on their parents’ lush farm in upstate New York. In his childhood, Judd is swept along by the sheer energy of the Mulvaneys and their wealth of beloved family stories. But now, 30 years old, Judd looks back through his memories to tell the secrets that eventually ripped apart the fabric of his storybook family.
Reminiscent of the works of Jane Smiley and Anne Tyler, Oates’ novel tells a tale that could be tragic, but is, instead, a ringing affirmation. Narrator Scott Shina’s performance perfectly captures the complex relationships within the Mulvaney clan.
©1996 The Ontario Review, Inc. (P)2001 Recorded Books, LLCListeners also enjoyed...




















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We Were the Mulvaneys
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Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?
If this story had ended half way through the book it would have been a classic. Unfortunately, it went on and on. It's a sad story of how a family reacts to a young girl's rape and how the family is torn apart from the rape due to selfishness and inability to understand that a child should be helped more than an adult who chooses to drink his life away.Would you be willing to try another book from Joyce Carol Oates? Why or why not?
Not for a while. Just don't want to listen to a book that keeps going when it should have ended.Have you listened to any of Scott Shina’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
I have not listened to any of Scott Shina's performances before but thought he did very well with this book.Did We Were the Mulvaneys inspire you to do anything?
No, should it have?Could Have Been a Classic but Isn't
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Average
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It takes the reader deep into their memory of changes and the inevitable pain of growing up and leaving the golden years of family and childhood behind. As well as remind us to come full circle with our family of creation, or the people we come to call family as adults.
Please read! It will touch your heart and give you insight into the tragedies, changes and simply growing up.
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Tedious
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Would you listen to We Were the Mulvaneys again? Why?
Yes, instills the value of solid values, consistency, clear pragmatic thinking.What did you like best about this story?
Redundant answer to redundant question. Instills the value of solid values, consistency, clear pragmatic thinking.Any additional comments?
Its a bit hard watching (listening for the pedantic) the family decay due to typical but silly values and aspects of personality.Slow decay of family; dad creating own catch 22s
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Her "A Widow's Story," on the other hand, was exquisitely read.
Another outstanding book ruined by the narrator
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What did you love best about We Were the Mulvaneys?
The truth of everyday life. A fictional story so real I couldn't help but relate to every character. I found myself questioning how I would have reacted to the rape and the actions of every person affected. Life often has no reason, people don't know why they do what they do. This book follows each member of the family without trying to find out "why", we simply are challenged to accept what is. So often in life we never get the answer to the why, yet we live and react, and keep going. That is what made this book so real to me. We didn't delve into the psyche of each character; they were our neighbors, an acquaintance, a distant relative. We stood on the outside and wept for them, raged for them, laughed for them, and ultimately cheered for them. Why? Because they survived.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
There were several moments when I wanted to shout at Marianne, you are smart, you are beautiful, you do deserve the praise you are given. So broken she was by her family's actions, real honest actions, that I could empathise with her doubts.Life...
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The only thing that was pretty annoying about it was that although the reader does a good job in many ways he seems to be totally unaware of how people speak in New York. He did the accents more like people from the deep South - maybe Texas.
Engrossing story
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The narrator is terrible
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