Member Reviews
The Dutch House is beautiful and intimidating. It is also where Danny & Maeve experienced both their happiest moments and their saddest and most humiliating. Told in Danny's voice with flashbacks and dialogue between Danny and Maeve, we learn their story from their father's purchase of The Dutch House in the 1950s to the present day.
I love Ann Patchett's writing. She has created memorable characters who deserve our empathy and concern. The secrets are revealed slowly and carefully. Although sometimes the narrative can be slightly confusing because it switches back and forth in time, the whole of the story is like a flower -- unfolding slowly to the end. When all the pieces come together they reveal a beautifully tender and emotional tale of family relations. This is not a book filled with page-turning action, just a touching story of real people who love each other, with all the real-life hurts, apologies, and misunderstandings. A great read.
It’s rare that one of the main characters in a book is a house, but in the book, The Dutch House is the story of what the house means and meant to the people it touched. A moving story as told by Danny, one of the people the house meant so much to and of his family’s connections to it.
5 enormous stars!!! This book had me at hello!! I enjoy reading novels where I am familiar with the setting/location and I am very familiar with location in The Dutch House!!! Ann Patchett does a fantastic creating characters that are so well depicted that by the end of the novel, you feel as if they are real people you know. I felt like a fly on the wall in The Dutch House, Conroy’s home.
This engrossing novel spans decades as we follow the Conroy siblings, Maeve and Danny through both triumphs and tribulations. I found the storyline extremely interesting as well as extremely touching. Ann Patchett gives us many full circle moments throughout this novel—loved that! I highly recommend this 5 star read to everyone! A true must read!!
"The Dutch House" may well be the most accessible of Ann Patchett's works, but beneath it's placid surface are matters of extraordinary depth and importance. The plot is addictive, the characters rich and complex, and the story deceptively labrynthine. "The Dutch House" is at its heart an examination of how flawed our perceptions can be, how mistaken our memories, how complicated our relationships, how surprisingly little we know about ourselves and the people around us. Time and again the protagonist will discover how wrong he was about something he was certain he "knew." There are echoes of Gatsby and Dickens here (not to mention countless fairy tales: yes, there actually is an evil stepmother!), but I suspect readers will rexperience a visceral sense of recognition in Patchett's depiction of memories, families, and motivations. I can't imagine a reader who will not pause for several moments and wonder (critically? understandingly?) at a character's behavior or decisions.
"The Dutch House" will find a broad and eager audience. It deserves to.
This was fine, but I didn't feel passionate about it, the way I've done about past Ann Patchett books.
I also think the cover is a nightmare, and I think I'm gonna have a hard time selling it to patrons based on that. (I mean, the cover is 100% appropriate to the book, but still. Not good.)
Thanks to the publisher and to Edelweiss for the digital ARC.
Ann Patchett never disappoints. She is so good at getting to the interior of the characters lives and how events affect family relationships, especially those of siblings. The events, in this case a house and a greedy stepmother, never let go. Highly recommended.
Ann Patchett is one of my favorite authors, and this newest novel does not disappoint.
This is the story of a brother and sister and how the Dutch House of their youth has dominated their lives. It seems uncanny how this house plays into every area of their lives, and hovers over many of their life decisions. It is told from the perspective of Danny, the brother, a humorous, empathetic character, who tries to explore the history of the house. Highly recommended!
Ann Patchett does not disappoint. The Dutch House contains many similar themes of Patchett's, but is still so different from anything else of hers.
Danny and Maeve are two of the most realistic characters I've encountered in quite some time.
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC of this title, another fascinating and satisfying novel by Ann Patchett. "The Dutch House," bought by self-made real estate magnate for his family at the end of WWII, becomes almost a character unto itself, as it looms large over the Conroy family members' lives in the fifty years following its purchase. Central to the story are Danny and Maeve, the Conroy children whose lives are deeply shaped by their experiences both in the Dutch House and outside of it after they are evicted by their stepmother. The bond between the siblings, the different paths their lives take, and the evolving, sometimes surprising family dynamics make for compelling reading. Another wonderful, re-readable novel by this another, and one of my favorite books of 2019 so far. Five stars.
A truly iconic book with seamless writing and character development. I love the theme of the influence the Dutch House has on
each family member. I realized I’d been reading around the genr3s because I had been waiting for a novel llike this this to be written. The POV was the
best possible choice, Danny renders the interior lives of the characters with accuracy and bias as would be the case in any backward
look at what shapes us. I wasn’t really able to appreciate the return of the mother or maybe more accurately how that subplot played out.
Thanks to the publisher and the author for such a great piece of literary fiction. So sad the book ended...
As expected, another great novel by Ann Patchett. I have read all of her books and will continue to recommend.
Being from the Philadelphia area, this novel meant a lot to me. I loved the family dynamics!
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Satisfying, fully realized portrait of a Philadelphia family and their house. This book is every possible thing that could mean, and more. Newly rich real estate speculator Cyril Conroy buys a beautiful jewel of a house as a surprise for his wife, Elna, around the end of WWII. She hates the house, and a few years after her second child is born, leaves the family for parts unknown. Left to carry on, the child Danny is cared for by the help, Sandy and Jocelyn, his older sister Maeve, his remote father, and a nanny called Fiona, or ‘Fluffy,’ at least until the latter is dismissed in disgrace. Jumping around in time, the novel’s main objective is for Danny to provide as full a portrait of his sister Maeve as possible, chronicling her intelligent, no-nonsense personality and the life choices she makes to preserve the siblings’ interests despite the thoughtlessness of the adults in their lives.
Andrea, the evil stepmother character of this dark rags-to-riches-to-rags fairytale, gets her claws in Cyril just because she wants the house. Andrea turns out to have two daughters of her own. Danny and Maeve fend for themselves much of the time, and even after they have gotten away, they share their unfinished grief over their mother’s abandonment by returning again and again to park on the street in front of the Dutch House, talk, and sometimes sneak a cigarette.
The novel moves to a satisfying conclusion that ends as well for the house as for the family. This is a character-driven story, but one of its protagonists is the house. We learn that everyone hates the elaborate ceiling in the dining room, which keeps people from using it. There is a little door in an upstairs closet that hides treasures. It has a third-floor ballroom which was full of raccoons and fleas when they bought the house, but Conroy did not know that because he had a bad knee from the war and did not climb all the stairs. Presiding over all are dour portraits of the Dutch House’s original owners, the VanHoebeeks, along with a portrait of Maeve as a girl (presumably the cover art).
“We overlay the present onto the past. We look back through the lens of what we know now, so we’re not seeing it as the people we were, we’re seeing it as the people we are, and that means the past has been radically altered.” The non-linear narrative works well because Danny can unfold events at different stages in his life more or less clearly depending on whether he is an adult, an adolescent, or a child. As a three-year-old, his memory of Fluffy smacking him with a spoon is traumatic, but when he encounters her later on as an adult, he finds the grudge he ought to hold just isn’t there. As one does, he lets his memories come and go from different years, but as a result the portrait is built masterfully.
Thank you Net Galley for the free ARC. Great family drama about an inheritance gone wrong and the consequences for two young siblings who lose their home to the greed of a step mother. They have a very tight bond and manage to support each other through adversity. Not my favorite Ann Patchett, but a worthy read!
Writing: 4.5/5 Plot: 4/5 Characters: 5/5
A family drama told largely through recollection in a loosely ordered, but well-timed set of memories. Danny tells the story — full of recognition of his then-obliviousness — of himself, his older sister Maeve, and their sometimes senseless path through life. Much of the story centers around the Dutch House — the outrageously lavish estate purchased by their newly-minted real estate mogul father at the end of WWII) — which purchase begins the unraveling of their family.
I’m a big Ann Patchett fan — her insight into character and how it is expressed and molded by events and situations is incomparable. While sometimes frustrating in the cluelessness of characters (as seen from our safe reader’s perch) and lack of closure, the story is ultimately a realistic portrayal of the way lives and relationships evolve and what we do and don’t learn from the path. It’s one of those books that gets even better the more you think about it after reading.
A HUGE thanx to Netgalley and HarperCollins for a review copy of this book, in exchange for this honest review.
I've only read two other Patchett books, but she has already become a favorite author, and I was very excited to be granted this ARC months prior to its publication in late Sept., since her last novel, Commonwealth, made it into my top 5 reads for 2016 - and I am fairly confident this one will do likewise for 2019.
The storyline follows somewhat similar ground as that previous book, being, more or less, an intricate family saga covering decades of the ins and outs of the Conroy family, and in particular, how the titular family manse outside Philadelphia impacts and impedes various relationships. The focus is primarily on a pair of siblings, with younger brother Danny doing the narrating, and once again Patchett does not follow a linear chronology, but weaves the stories back and forwards from the late 40's to the early 2000's. I sometimes had trouble following this in her previous book, since there was a plethora of characters to keep straight, but this is an easier go, since there are really only about a dozen characters in total. Although Patchett's prose is not fussy or overtly calls attention to itself, it always flows beautifully and is a pleasure to luxuriate in. Just the kind of lovely, leisurely read one wants/needs for the beginning of summer. I hope it is a tremendous success for her.
Good story, how siblings get along in life. When parents fail children and the children work together to cope with it. How an old house can shape ones life.
The latest from Patchett is a triumph as always. For me, it just shows again that she is one of the best writing today. As always, her characters are so strong and fragile, so human, and the spin on the fairytale is so clever. I loved every page, and I’m so sorry that Danny and Maeve’s story has ended. Bravo as always, and I’m going to sing the praises of the book to everyone
A disappointing novel dominated by an extremely self involved and unlikeabkr main character. There is not much to recommend in ‘this slowpaced story. I really didn’t like the way Parchett wrapped up the storylines in a peremptory way in the last few chapters.
This novel reminded me of a John Irving / Ann Tyleresque story that failed.
A remarkable story. Sweeping and merciful. With pinpricks of familiarity and loss. And love. I read the prepub (thank you, Netgalley) carefully. Sometimes doubling back to make certain of the author’s meaning.
The portrait on the cover depicts beautifully the aloneness that each character must singularly endure.
My only complaint...the ending was too summarily wrapped up. I needed more time.
** spoiler alert ** I was granted access to this gem through NetGalley and scarfed it straight down. I don't know what it is about Ann Patchett, but I am utterly enchanted by her work. Each book is different, yet they are all approachable and unexpected. I am never disappointed (except perhaps by The Magician's Assistant) This is an epic family story writ small, as large as a grand, imposing house and as minute as the invisible threads of loyalty that bind a brother and sister. Danny and Maeve never recovered from being thrown out of the Dutch House, their family home, by their stepmother after their father's death. Now that they are grown with families of their own, the house has become a touchstone that ties them to their dead, largely mysterious father and missing mother, who abandoned them when Danny was a toddler. The mystery and myth that surround their parents haunt them until they finally confront the occupants of the Dutch House one last time, and learn the truth about their father's silence and mother's disappearance.
Reader, I loved it. There is nothing I adore more than a quiet domestic drama steeped in grudges and mystery. Get thee a NetGalley account post-haste or enjoy the delicious wait until September.
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