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The Homecoming: Book Two of the Niceville Trilogy
Unavailable
The Homecoming: Book Two of the Niceville Trilogy
Unavailable
The Homecoming: Book Two of the Niceville Trilogy
Ebook593 pages8 hours

The Homecoming: Book Two of the Niceville Trilogy

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

In Niceville, a pleasant Southern town where evil lurks just beneath the surface, two back-to-back airplane crashes set off a spellbinding chain reaction of murder, inadvertent kidnapping, and double-dealing.
 
Detective Nick Kavanaugh must balance his investigation into the accidents with family concerns and a long-buried mystery. He and his wife Kate, a family lawyer, have taken in Kate’s sister and her two children, escaping their abusive father Byron Deitz. The Kavanaughs are also caring for the orphaned Rainey Teague, who recently survived a strange kidnapping and has come back a very different child. Rainey was not the last person to vanish from a Niceville street; most recently, an administrator from Rainey’s school, and—even worse—Kate’s father, a local historian, have gone missing.  Using her father’s files, Kate and Nick start to unearth their town’s bloodstained past, trying to discover the truth behind generations of disappearances. But a sinister someone—or something—stands in their way.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 16, 2013
ISBN9780385349635
Unavailable
The Homecoming: Book Two of the Niceville Trilogy
Author

Carsten Stroud

Carsten Stroud is the author of Cuba Strait, Black Water Transit, the award-winning Sniper's Moon, and other novels. His nonfiction titles include Deadly Force; Iron Bravo, chosen for the U.S. Army's recommended reading list; and the New York Times bestseller Close Pursuit. He lives on the shores of Lake Huron.

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Reviews for The Homecoming

Rating: 3.121951341463414 out of 5 stars
3/5

164 ratings9 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    New book by the auther of The Reader. Similar themes, but the story diverged into a take-off of The Odessey, which I guess I should read, and he lost me for a while. If you are going to read one of his books, choose The Reader, if you liked The Reader, try this one for comparison.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This is the story of Peter who grows up in Germany after the War.He used to stay with his Grandparents when he was a small boy and he remembers the extract of a story about a soldier returning from the War, Peter is determined to find out what happened in the end of this story.Also his Mum never really told him about his own Father. He eventually meets him but doesn't tell him he is his son. Peter also meets a girl called Barbara who he falls in love with.This book had the potential to be so much better but it really bored me and confused me with its endless reference to Greek mythology . Was glad to finish it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Homecoming by Bernhard Schlink, translated from the German by Michael Henry Heim, is about one man's attempt to connect with his past. Because the narrator is German as is the author, it is tempting to look at the novel in larger terms, to make it the story of a people trying to connect with their shared history. It might be possible to make a good case for this position. The narrator, Peter Debeauer is raised by a single mother. He believes his father died in World War II. He is allowed to spend summers with his father's parents, Germans living in Switzerland, where he feels more at home, more a part of a family. His grandparents publish a series of books in German called "Novels for Your Reading Pleasure and Entertainment." After his grandparents die he begins reading them and finds a fragment of one unpublished novel particularly interesting. He becomes obsessed with it, researches its history, tries to find its author, to discover that the missing author is probably his own father. Few people he meets will tell him all he wants to know about his father. Even his mother is evasive when questioned. His father was a dedicated believer in National Socialism, a supporter of Nazism up until the end. What writings the narrator can find from this period are all justifications of Nazism and attempts to reinvigorate the spirit of ordinary Germans, who were already losing the war. Are these parallels meant to stand for Germany itself and for the attempts of each successive generation of Germans to come to grips with what happened under Nazism and later under socialism in East Germany? It seems possible to me, but a more knowledgeable critic will have to provide a more conclusive answer. The book is called Homecoming and this theme permeates each level of the novel. Peter, who is without a home, spends much of his time thinking about homecomings--the novel fragment his father wrote is about a man who escapes a Russian prisoner of war camp to return home and find his wife and child living with another man. Homer's Odyssey plays an important role in the story with its famous homecoming scene, the slaughter of Penelope's suitors. The reunification of Germany takes place during the course of the novel, perhaps one of the greatest homecomings in history. Towards the end of the book, when Peter leaves his wife and travels to America, he hopes she will wait for him like Penelope did, but he also fears he'll return to find her with someone else like the hero of his father's novel did. Homecoming is a book with a lot of meat on its bones. If your book club is looking for something that will spark discussion, this is an excellent choice, as good as Mr. Schlink's novel The Reader. Peter's investigation into the unpublished novel makes Homecoming enough of a detective story to keep the pages turning and the panoramic view of recent European history the author presents provides a fascinating education for readers. There are many parts of Europe's history during the second world war that have still not seen the light of day. Homecoming presents several of them. However.I am not the first person to have a problem with the novel's ending. I won't describe exactly what happens here but I will say that I had a very difficult time buying it. In the end Mr. Schlink seems to want us to understand that we are all capable of evil, but the lengths he goes to to prove this point undermine his position. I suspect it is true that at a certain point, under certain conditions, people will probably do whatever they have to to stay alive. George Orwell demonstrates this in his novel 1984. While it may be true that a large majority of people who lived through the second world war, especially those on the ground where it was fought, committed acts they would normally have considered evil, it didn't start out that way. People began committing evil acts long before they had to in order to survive. The narrator's father is one of those people. He began advocating for National Socialism early on, a fact that the narrator never confronts and one that is only rarely confronted in fiction.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    this is a deeply philosophical work of fiction. i had a hard time getting through some passages, and sometimes had a hard time liking the protagonist. however, if philosophy is your cup of tea & you're looking for something similar in fiction, this would be a good pick.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't like this book as much as I liked the Reader, but then the Reader would be a hard act to follow. The story of the book is that the main character searches for his father. His father had disappeared at the end of WW2. The story is more confusing in that, but the theme of the book is evil, can good come from evil, what does evil teach us. There are some good and very powerful sections in the book and it is well written. But at times the story gets at least for me very confusing and I did wonder why the character did what he did.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The first two-thirds of this book were pretty good. We start with young Peter describing his childhood visits to his grandparents in Switzerland. His grandparents edit a series of light novels, one of which is the story of Carl, a German soldier, and his struggle to return home from the Russian front after WWII. Unfortunately, Peter has only the manuscript of the book, and the ending is missing. What happens when Carl returns home and finds his wife with another man and two small daughters? Does he stay and fight for his wife, or does he turn and leave? Peter is unable to find the book on his grandparent's shelves and forgets about it until he finds the manuscript again as an adult. Then he begins the quest to find the book so as to learn its ending.The story of Peter's search for the book and it's author is quite interesting. Unfortunately, about two-thirds of the way through, Peter makes a startling discovery about his father, who he had thought died in WWII. The rest of the book is about Peter's search for the truth about his father, not just what happened to him but why he disappeared. This story is much less compelling, and even bizarre in places. Schlink tenuously connects this search to Peter's interest in the Carl story, but neither the connection nor the individual stories are resolved.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I enjoyed Schlink's The Reader, but Homecoming was a disappointment. It charts the journey of Peter Debauer to discover the story of his Swiss father. Peter is an academic, brought up by his mother in postwar Germany who remembers fondly holidays with his paternal Swiss grandparents. His mother is strangely silent about his father's history.Homecoming draws on parallels between the partial transcript of a novel published by Peter's grandparents; Odysseus and Penelope; Agamemnon and Clytemnestra; miscellaneous homecomings from conflict; the story of Peter's father; and eventually Peter's own situation.Somewhere and somehow legal, ethical and philosophical angles are introduced. An "iron rule" argument to justify war is described: a fighter willing to die for his cause has the right to kill. A strange passage permits genocide where there are no surviving members of a community to compensate. Such detours and associations, perhaps interesting in isolation, envelop a plot which consequently is nowhere near as captivating as The Reader.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Here’s the blurb from the publisher:A child of World War II, Peter Debauer grew up with his mother and scant memories of his father, a victim of war. Now an adult, Peter embarks upon a search for the truth surrounding his mother’s unwavering—but shaky—history and the possibility of finding his missing father after all these years. The search takes him across Europe, to the United States, and back: finding witnesses, falling in and out of love, chasing fragments of a story and a person who may or may not exist. Within a maze of reinvented identities, Peter pieces together a portrait of a man who uses words as one might use a change of clothing, as he assumes a new guise in any given situation simply to stay alive.The chase leads Peter to New York City, where he hopes to find the real person behind the disguises.The Short of It:I liked it, but I didn’t like it and if this brief statement makes absolutely no sense to you, then read on.The Rest of It:Homecoming is one of those novels that is a story, within a story. I usually love these types of books. A book about a book? I’m there. BUT, this one promised to be an adventure and for me, it sort of petered out halfway through. As Peter heads out on his quest to find the truth, the story starts to get a bit muddy and then I started to skim, and then I was completely lost. By the end, I thought I had a pretty good grasp of what happened, but after thinking about it for a day or two, I realize that I really have no clue.To his credit, Schlink’s characters are lovely. I liked them very much and felt as if I really got to know them. If it weren’t for the strong characters I probably would have given up on the book because it just didn’t grab me as much as I expected it to. The ending was very strange too. Almost surreal at one point. It didn’t seem to fit the rest of the story.Homecoming is my book club’s pick for this month so I’m hoping that the discussion on Thursday will shed some light on what exactly happened there at the end. Have any of you read it? If so, what did you think of it?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Homecoming, more so the long journey home, the theme of the Odyssey, weaves through the entire text in multiple strands: The Odyssey through Debauer’s, the protagonist’s life from his birth in the last months of the II. World War in Germany’s eastern region, his growing up as the only child of his demanding mother, his summers in Switzerland, quiet and happy, staying with his grandparents the parents of his father he never knew, his search for traces of this dead father, interwoven with the 12-year history of the 3rd Reich, its promise of a place for all pure-blooded Germans to forge a common glorious future for 1000 years to come, its promise of ending any tiring routine and ‘existential Müdigkeit’, the culmination in the intellectual duel between Debauer and De Baur over the question of totalitarian thinking, good and evil, the responsibilities towards those close to you and those who suffer, the responsibility regarding ones thoughts and opinions.I have to praise the book reluctantly almost against my will. Like a thriller – Sch. wrote several, none of which I read - I was unable to put it down; ‘against my will’: looking back I found it just too constructed for my unreserved praise. (III-16)