This stunning, break-out achievement has already been hailed by Emma Donoghue, bestselling author of Room, for presenting "passion and addiction, guilt and damage, all the beautiful mess of family life. Carry the One will lift readers off their feet and bear them along on its eloquent tide."
Carry the One begins in the hours following Carmen's wedding reception, when a car filled with stoned, drunk, and sleepy guests accidentally hits and kills a girl on a dark country road. For the next twenty-five years, those involved, including Carmen and her brother and sister, craft their lives in response to this single tragic moment. As one character says, "When you add us up, you always have to carry the one." Through friendships and love affairs; marriage and divorce; parenthood, holidays, and the modest calamities and triumphs of ordinary days, Carry the One shows how one life affects another and how those who thrive and those who self-destruct are closer to each other than we'd expect. As they seek redemption through addiction, social justice, and art, Anshaw's characters reflect our deepest pain and longings, our joys, and our transcendent moments of understanding. This wise, wry, and erotically charged novel derives its power and appeal from the author's exquisite use of language; her sympathy for her recognizable, very flawed characters; and her persuasive belief in the transforming forces of time and love.
Show moreThis stunning, break-out achievement has already been hailed by Emma Donoghue, bestselling author of Room, for presenting "passion and addiction, guilt and damage, all the beautiful mess of family life. Carry the One will lift readers off their feet and bear them along on its eloquent tide."
Carry the One begins in the hours following Carmen's wedding reception, when a car filled with stoned, drunk, and sleepy guests accidentally hits and kills a girl on a dark country road. For the next twenty-five years, those involved, including Carmen and her brother and sister, craft their lives in response to this single tragic moment. As one character says, "When you add us up, you always have to carry the one." Through friendships and love affairs; marriage and divorce; parenthood, holidays, and the modest calamities and triumphs of ordinary days, Carry the One shows how one life affects another and how those who thrive and those who self-destruct are closer to each other than we'd expect. As they seek redemption through addiction, social justice, and art, Anshaw's characters reflect our deepest pain and longings, our joys, and our transcendent moments of understanding. This wise, wry, and erotically charged novel derives its power and appeal from the author's exquisite use of language; her sympathy for her recognizable, very flawed characters; and her persuasive belief in the transforming forces of time and love.
Show moreCarol Anshaw is the author of Aquamarine, Seven Moves, and Lucky in the Corner. She has received the Ferro-Grumley Award, the Carl Sandburg Literary Arts Award for Fiction, and a National Book Critics Circle Citation for Excellence in Reviewing. She lives in Chicago.
"Sentence by intelligent sentence, the novelist makes . . . us feel
the remorse and joy and fears much more sharply than we can
sometimes know those same emotions in the lives of our closest
siblings or friends or even in ourselves. . . . Carol Anshaw gets
under the skin of her characters and under the reader's, as
well."--Alan Cheuse, NPR's "All Things Considered"
"[Anshaw] writes extravagantly well. She has a remarkable ear for
dialogue, for the cutting remark, for the beautifully phrased and
telling detail. She paints an acid-dipped and spot-on portrait of
the American obsession with self. . . . Skillfully
rendered."--Washington Post
"A brilliant feat of storytelling . . . one of the most intensely
vibrant novels I've ever read. . . . This book is that kind of
pearl."--Susan Straight, The Boston Globe
"A laser-focused, compulsively readable tale of chance and fate
with a big brain, sharp tongue, and huge heart. . . . This book is
undeniably hip, but it's not the hip of Urban Outfitters knit caps
or fixed gear bicycles. Carry the One has its finger on the pulse
of the . . . human condition. That's what makes it hip with
superpowers. That's what makes it the platonic ideal of cool."--Kit
Steinkellner, bookriot.com
"Although Anshaw has long been a literary milestone-maker, her
pioneering is the least of her accomplishments. Anshaw is that
rare, brilliant, witty writer whose prose is rich and buttery and
whose plotting is as well-conceived and seamlessly executed as that
of the most intricate thriller. Her psychological insights lend
exceptional depth to her characters, who are so painfully and
hilariously recognizable that we cannot turn from the familiarity
of their circumstances and their flaws."--Chicago Tribune
"Anshaw deftly depicts family ties broken and reconnected,
portraying the best and the worst of this group of eccentrics.
Recommended for readers of well-crafted literary fiction."--Library
Journal
"Anshaw has a deft touch with the events of ordinary life, giving
them heft and meaning. . . . Funny, touching, knowing . . . a
quiet, lovely, genuine accomplishment."--Publishers Weekly (boxed
starred review)
"Anshaw has a way of writing that nails the psychology of humans.
She explores the complicated relationships between men and women,
sister and brother, mother and daughter, by breaking wide open
inhibitions, those sticky boundaries that hold us back and that
pesky fear business that keeps us hiding in our closets. . . . It
is intense, sweet, honest, and hopeful, all at the same
time."--redheadedbookchild.com
"Beautifully observed . . . [Anshaw] intimately dissects how one
event or choice can alter the trajectory of a life, how a fork in
the road can lead to wholly unexpected and divergent outcomes . . .
a resonate 'Big Chill'-like look at how time affects relationships.
. . . Though the novel grapples with the many sadnesses of life . .
. it does so with lyricism and humor. . . . We are pulled along by
[Anshaw's] uncommon ability to describe just about anything. . . .
As the years unfurl in this affecting novel, memories of the
accident that took Casey Redman's life receed, but the fallout from
that night has been internalized by everyone involved, invisibly
shaping their outlook on the world, their feelings about love and
responsibility and regret."--Michiko Kakutani, The New York
Times
"Carol Anshaw is one of those authors who should be a household
name (in literature-loving homes, anyway). There's a good chance
that her latest novel, Carry the One, will make that happen . . .
fine, eloquent."--USA Today
"Compulsively readable . . . subtle and seductive . . . a novel
with the sweep of a family saga and the compressed gleam of a short
story."--Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Even though the book explores the lives of the characters for more
than two decades, the narrative is well paced--it is never too
brisk nor does it get bogged down in wordy explanations. Anshaw
deftly handles the passage of time, the interior lives of her
compelling characters, and the specter of Casey's death as they all
move away from it and on with their lives. There is humor, sadness,
heartbreak, intelligence and compassion here. It's an outstanding
and beautiful story of guilt, family, love, and both the healing
and damage the years can bring."--Bookreporter.com
"Featuring Carol Anshaw's trademark warmth, wit and erotic
subtlety, Carry the One is loopy and funny, sad and complex.
Painterly, lifelike, it provides grownup pleasure."--James McManus,
author of Positively Fifth Street
"Graceful and compassionate . . . Writing with rueful wit and a
subtle understanding of the currents and passions that rule us,
Anshaw demonstrates that struggling to do one's best, whatever the
circumstances, makes for a life of consequence."--People magazine,
4 stars
"Here's passion and addiction, guilt and damage, all the beautiful
mess of family life. Carry the One will lift readers off their feet
and bear them along on its eloquent tide."--Emma Donoghue, author
of Room
"If you love Jonathan Franzen, you'll love this compelling
book."--Entertainment Weekly (Bullseye)
"It's my birthday and the phone rings and I don't want to answer
because I am reading Carol Anshaw's Carry the One, and how can
reality compare?"--Nicole Hollander, creator of "Sylvia"
"Masterful in her authenticity, quicksilver dialogue, wise humor,
and receptivity to mystery, Anshaw has
created a deft and transfixing novel of fallibility and quiet
glory."--Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)
"Moving and engaging . . . funny, smart and closely observed . . .
explores the way tragedy can follow hard on celebration, binding
people together even more lastingly than passion. . . . Anshaw
gives readers the reward of paying close attention to ordinary
people as [she] illuminates flawed, likeable characters with
sympathy and truth."--Sylvia Brownrigg, The New York Times Book
Review
"Provocative . . . her style is dead-on. What makes this a good
book is the way the characters change and interact over
time."--Dallas Morning News
"Reading this book, I felt like I was watching someone cross a
tightrope with the same relaxed, assured stride they would use on
solid ground. Anshaw is in such graceful command that her story
about three gifted, wounded siblings almost doesn't feel like
fiction. The traumatic accident that derails the characters' lives
as young adults is a sort of echo of the childhood damage they've
already lived through. The ways that they do and don't survive this
are variously tragic, stark, and beautiful, but always utterly
convincing. Along the way, the generous Anshaw doles out
psychological acuity, antic humor, cultural critique and profound
wisdom as the merest casual asides. It can't be as effortless as
she makes it look, but it's a pleasure to soar with her, for a
while, on that high wire."--Alison Bechdel, author of Fun Home
"Sharply observed and warmly understanding--another fine piece of
work from this talented author."--Kirkus Reviews
"Superb."--Financial Times
"The eloquence of Anshaw's prose approaches poetry, and her
haunting novel lingers in the memory."--Buffalo News
"This deceptively casual novel is both intimate and mysterious,
frank and elusive, full of the stuff of life--love, lust, drugs,
dogs, marriage, children, divorce, art, prisons, and
politics--while haunted every shimmering page of the way by the
death of a young girl, whose ghostly presence poses one of this
novel's compelling questions: how can we disentangle old knots when
new ones are being tied with every passing day?"--Scott Spencer,
author of Man in the Woods and Endless Love
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