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In the Meantime
 
 

In the Meantime [Kindle Edition]

Robin Lippincott
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

From the intimacy of small town America to big city life, from World War II to 9/11, In the Meantime vividly encapsulates an unforgettable era.On a hot summer's day in 1931, three five-year-olds meet on a dusty street in a small Midwestern town, beginning a friendship that will last all their lives. Kathryn, the oldest in an ever-expanding family, is bright and earnest, and thinks she wants to become a nurse. Starling is an only child with an absent father. He doesn't yet know that he is of mixed race-he doesn't even know what that means-all he knows is that when he grows up he will be a star. Luke doesn't know what he wants, except for his older brother not to be dead.Together they experience the joys and pains of childhood, although the anxieties of puberty and awakening sexuality nearly destroy their three-way friendship forever. Reaching adulthood after World War II, they follow their dreams to New York City, where they discover that not even Manhattan is free of racism and prejudice.Through the years of their ever-entwined adult lives some dreams are realized while others grow dim, but one constant remains: their bond of friendship. At the book's end, some seventy years after it began, only one of them remains to tell the story of their lives, and of what happened…in the meantime.About the AuthorRobin Lippincott is the author of two previous novels and a collection of short stories. His work has also appeared in The Paris Review, Fence, The New York Times Book Review, The Literary Review, and many other journals, as well as several anthologies, and he has been awarded fellowships to Yaddo and The MacDowell Colony. He teaches in the MFA Writing Program at Spalding University and at Harvard University. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Synopsis

On a hot summer's day in 1931, three five-year-olds meet on a dusty street in a small Midwestern town, beginning a friendship that will last all their lives. Kathryn, the oldest in an ever-expanding family, is bright and earnest, and thinks she wants to become a nurse. Starling is an only child with an absent father. He doesn't yet know that he is of mixed race-he doesn't even know what that means-all he knows is that when he grows up he will be a star. Luke doesn't know what he wants, except for his older brother not to be dead. Together they experience the joys and pains of childhood, although the anxieties of puberty and awakening sexuality nearly destroy their three-way friendship forever. Reaching adulthood after World War II, they follow their dreams to New York City, where they discover that not even Manhattan is free of racism and prejudice.Through the years of their ever-entwined adult lives some dreams are realized while others grow dim, but one constant remains: their bond of friendship. At the book's end, some seventy years after it began, only one of them remains to tell the story of their lives, and of what happened...in the meantime.

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Robin Lippincott
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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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74 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A writer with a rare lyric gift..., 22 Dec 2007
This review is from: IN THE MEANTIME (Hardcover)
What saves Robin Lippincott's prose from being merely beautiful, merely decorative, is its strong emotional undertow. I felt it from the first page of In the Meantime, a kind of ache of tenderness that swelled and ebbed and swelled again throughout the book; you get carried along on the feeling as though it's literally a wave, and it keeps you turning the pages without noticing the time. A lot happens in this book: it covers 70 years in the lives (and after-lives) of its three central characters, who meet at the age of five in a small Midwestern town, where they forge an ineradicable bond, and head for New York together as soon as they can escape; there they suffer all the ordinary -- as well as some extraordinary -- sorrows and disillusionments of coming up against their own and the world's limitations. In the case of the most dazzling and fragile figure here, those sorrows and disillusionments are made more intense by how much he once wanted from life, and believed would be his by right. But although the story itself is rich, and there is plenty to grip you in the events depicted, it really is Lippincott's prose, his voice as narrator, that sets it apart. It is difficult to describe that voice without resorting to contradictions. Though it is certainly sorrowful, the love he so evidently feels for his characters, and a powerful sense of joy -- he can celebrate the small pleasures of life in a way that makes it possible for the reader, too, to exult in them -- make this book anything but depressing. You close it rejoicing.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great start, but that's all, 26 Jan 2012
By 
Mark Hurst (Bedfordshire) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: In the Meantime (Kindle Edition)
I'm no literary critic, but the structure of this book appears so self-consciously contrived that it might easily be the result of a writing assignment. This alone wouldn't necessarily damn the product, but in my view it quickly loses its way and fizzles out. I really liked the first sixty pages, which are written in a simple and yet lyrical style that conveys an increasing pace as the children grow up and approach adulthood. But then it's as if a different author takes over. The rest of the book is an accelerating catalogue of the three friends' increasingly divergent adult lives, and it is written in a style that barely resembles those early chapters. The significances of plot seem heavy-handed to the end (when they become downright crass) and from here on the book is, honestly, quite dull. I'd like to think that in skim-reading the latter two-thirds at an increasingly-impatient rate I was somehow connecting with the author's message, but it's hardly a recommendation.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Turgid and Dire, 18 Feb 2012
By 
Mr. V. Summers "vincesum" (Galashiels) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: In the Meantime (Kindle Edition)
This is really poor - couldn't get more than a quarter of the way through it - I really don't care what happens in the rest of the book.
The prose about the relationships of the characters as childhood friends seems to be written to be as 'literary' as possible with some very odd choices of words thrown in to try and impress the reader how clever the author is e.g. quotidian - anyone actually ever use this word? It also reads as if the author has absolutely no idea how children think, make friends and interact.

My advice - avoid it!
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