Carol Goodman’s River
Road gets off to a quick start when Nan Lewis, who teaches creative writing
at a small college in upstate New York, crashes into a deer on her way home from
the end-of-semester party at which she has just learned that tenure is being
denied her. By the time Nan realizes
what has just happened, the deer, having scrambled off into the nearby trees,
is nowhere to be seen. Early the next
morning when a police sergeant bangs on her front door to tell her that the
body of one of her students, victim of a hit and run driver, has been found on
River Road, Nan learns that her she has some serious explaining to do.
Because of the obvious damage to her car and where police
found it, Nan is the obvious suspect in the young woman’s death. The woman’s body was found in almost the
exact spot where, just a few years earlier, a driver coming around the same
blind curve on River Road struck and killed Nan’s little girl. Now many of the same people who had helped
her deal with the loss of her only child then are accusing her of letting one
of her students die all alone in a ditch by the side of the road.
Something in Nan died alongside her daughter. Her husband’s reaction to their little girl’s
death had been to walk away from the marriage that produced the child. Nan herself simply turned to alcohol to
deaden her own grief, and now she is known as a woman with a “drinking
problem,” a problem bad enough to leave her unsure about what she saw on River
Road the night she hit the unlucky deer.
She knows she did not strike Leia Dawson – but she cannot make enough
sense of her dreamlike memories of the previous evening to prove her innocence
to those who question her responsibility for the woman’s death. Nan Lewis is the most unreliable of
narrators, and author Carol Goodman puts that characteristic to good use
throughout River Road.
Author Carol Gooman |
Nan, having already lost the only child she ever expects to
have, now has no job and no friends.
With nothing left to lose, she begins to ask questions of her own – and the
ugliness of what she learns stuns her.
The more she learns about her colleagues and students, and the secrets
they are hiding, Nan wonders how she could have ever been so blind. Now, if she can only manage to keep herself
alive long enough to do it, she is determined to identify the real killer and
salvage what little of reputation she has left.
River Road is the
story of a woman who refuses to forgive herself for the few seconds of
inattention that ended in her daughter’s death - and a story about how quickly
a community can turn on one of its own. But much like The Girl on the Train, the novel relies so much on coincidence, an
almost stereotypical villain, and the remarkable speed at which its heroine
recovers from serious physical abuse that it loses a bit of its potential impact. All that said, readers willing to suspend their
disbelief to the right level should find this one fun.
(Review copy provided by publisher)
(Review copy provided by publisher)
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