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Ancient Highway | 
| Author: Bret Lott Publisher: Center Point Large Print Category: Book
List Price: $32.95 Buy New: $29.74 You Save: $3.21 (10%)
New (17) Used (3) from $29.69
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews
Format: Large Print Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 383 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 6.4 x 1.2
ISBN: 1602852332 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9781602852334 ASIN: 1602852332
Publication Date: August 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description From the bestselling author of Jewel and The Difference Between Women and Men comes a haunting novel of home, family, and the pursuit of lost dreams. Ancient Highway brilliantly weaves together the hopes and regrets of three characters from three generations as they reconcile who they are and who they might have been.
In 1925, a fourteen-year-old boy leaves his family’s farm and hops a boxcar in a dusty Texas field, heading for Hollywood and a life in the “flickers.” In 1947, a ten-year-old girl aches for a real home with a real family in a wide-open space, far from the crowded Los Angeles streets where her handsome cowboy father chases stardom and her mother holds a secret. In 1980, a young man just out of the Navy visits his elderly yet colorful grandparents in Los Angeles, eager to uncover his family’s silent history.
For the Holmeses, a longing for something else–another place, a second chance–seems to run in the family DNA. From Earl’s journey west toward Hollywood glory, to his daughter Joan’s wish for a normal existence away from the bright lights, to his grandson Brad’s yearning for truth, this deep-rooted desire sustains them, no matter how much the goal eludes them. But ultimately, in each generation, a family crisis forces a turning away from the horizon and the acceptance of a reality that is by turns harsh and healing.
Inspired by stories of his own family, Bret Lott beautifully renders the lives of ordinary people with extraordinary faith in a mesmerizing and finely wrought tale of love and letting go.
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| Customer Reviews:
A very powerful story! November 14, 2008 I really can't add much to Donna Volkenannt's excellent review. It's a very well written "human" story. As I was nearing the end of this book, I thought, "Drat...it's almost finished".
Superb novel about ambition and desire September 10, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
ANCIENT HIGHWAY is one of the richest, smartest books ever written about fame and its fallout. The book explores the underside of Hollywood, exploring with gorgeous precision the blind hunger that can drive people's yearning for celebrity--and, with special clarity, the cost of that hunger. Lott sees with unflinching compassion the terrible selfishness of ambition, and his characters ring true in their rage as well as their desire. Readers who admire Nathanael West's "The Day of the Locust" will find much to satisfy them in Lott's superb novel; in place of West's grotesque caricatures are human, humane portraits that are all the more moving because in them we are likely to recognize ourselves.
An okay read August 22, 2008 One of the major threads running through Ancient Highway seem, to me, to be about self-centeredness. Earl's family suffered for his devotion to an unrealistic and unrealized dream; then his daughter repeated the pattern with her detachment from her own child. Earl's wife seems to love her daughter, but gives her little attention. The ups and down of the characters' financial lives (the depression, oil boom and bust, comfortable retirement) serve to emphasize that, regardless of external circumstances, having good relationships is paramount. But this family never quite got it right.
A thoughtful portrayal of hope in the face of shattered dreams and healing in the face of pain August 18, 2008 On the day 11-year-old Earl Holmes plops down a nickel to watch a "flicker show," he dreams of becoming a Hollywood star. One night, three years later, he gathers up his belongings, sneaks out of the house and hops a passing train with his sights set on stardom in California. To support himself while waiting to be discovered in Hollywood, he works menial jobs, uses up his stack of glossies and wears out shoe leather going to auditions. With each faint whisper of promise, he jumps on any lead in hopes of being cast in a part --- any part --- and eventually lands one in a "Three Stooges" short.
While celebrating his minor victory at the Cocoanut Grove, Earl meets Saralee Kennedy, a lovely and talented singer from St. Louis who smiles and winks at him while she is auditioning for Kay Kyser and His Orchestra. Earl is immediately smitten: "He was in love...and he showed her his love the only way he knew how: He winked back, and smiled his Buddy Rogers smile."
While Earl dreams of stardom, Saralee dreams of settling down. After their marriage, they have a daughter, Joan. Years later, while Earl is off serving in the Merchant Marines, Saralee and Joan move in with Earl's family in East Texas --- a place of lush trees and wide sky that young Joan comes to consider home. When the war ends, they return to California, where Joan and her mother once again live in the shadow of her father's dream.
Decades later, Joan is divorced and leading a quiet existence in Arizona. In 1980, her estranged son Brad returns from service in the Navy to live with his grandparents in California. After participating in the evacuation of Saigon and witnessing hope in the face of chaos, Brad desperately seeks to be part of a family, no matter how damaged.
Bret Lott's strong portrayal of place and time, his graceful descriptions and elegantly drawn characters leap from the pages. His behind-the-scenes peek through Earl's eyes at a bygone era of Hollywood is flavored with rich detail. Brad's observations about Vietnam evacuees aboard the USS Denver brought tears to my eyes, for both their sentiment and the author's use of language.
ANCIENT HIGHWAY is a thoughtful portrayal of hope in the face of shattered dreams and healing in the face of pain. It is a book about which I echo Earl's word: "Hurrah!"
--- Reviewed by Donna Volkenannt
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