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Call me When You Land
Call me When You Land
Call me When You Land
Ebook279 pages9 hours

Call me When You Land

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

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On the brink of her fortieth birthday, Katie Olmstead is in no mood to celebrate. Still tending bar to support a stalled art career, she continues to struggle with her temperamental teenage son, C.J., who wants less to do with her every day. When Katie gets word that C.J.'s estranged father has died and willed C.J. his Harley-Davidson, the gift quickly becomes a wedge driving C.J. and Katie even further apart.

With the past parked in the driveway of their New England home, C.J.'s increasing outbursts and Katie's self-sabotage resurrect memories of Katie's own troubled childhood, one plagued by a mentally ill mother and a neglectful father. As Katie's notion of motherhood is tested, her artistic ambitions dwindle and she begins to feel like an imposter amongst her seemingly refined neighbors.

Suddenly faced with a bullying, overachieving sister she hasn't spoken to in years, an on-again, off-again boyfriend she just can't love, and a drinking habit that's spiraling out of control, Katie finds support in an unlikely place-- her eccentric and ailing great uncle, Walter. From his room on the third floor, Walter watches over them, encouraging both Katie and C.J. to do the work they fear in order to redeem their family.

A beautifully written family drama, Call Me When You Land offers an astutely observed portrait of a broken family striving toward repair. Out of his protagonist's despair, debut novelist Schiavone extracts humor, compassion, courage, and offers insight into the deeply human determination to survive.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 21, 2011
ISBN9781579622213
Call me When You Land
Author

Michael Schiavone

Michael Schiavone has been writing professionally since 2000. After graduating from Dickinson College, he worked as a stockbroker in San Francisco and Boston during the late '90's dot-com boom. Following that bubble's burst, he tended bar in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Currently he works as a day trader and emergency medical technician on Massachusett's North Shore. When not writing, Michael practices mixed martial arts and obsessively cleans his house. He lives with his wife, Abbie (an artist), their son, Colton, and three temperamental rescue dogs.

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Reviews for Call me When You Land

Rating: 3.171874975 out of 5 stars
3/5

32 ratings14 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a really great read. It was depressing, sure, but I don't mind that. I enjoyed many aspects of this novel-it was the small things that kept me interested. For one thing, I just liked that Katie was an artist and that C.J. had inherited her passion and talent for art. I enjoy reading about artistic people or families. It's small details like that which can really make a book enjoyable for me, even if the story line isn't something I typically delve into. I read this book for the characters. I genuinely liked Katie, flaws and all, and I found her to be incredibly interesting. I liked C.J. just because he came across as so real. His character was very well-written, though his violent tendencies were sometimes disturbing and I thought they were more troublesome than Katie's alcohol problem. Katie is the mother, however, so I can see why her problem needed to be addressed more so than C.J.'s.My one criticism of the book is how late the flashbacks between Katie and Craig came into the story. For the first half of the book, I was really curious about Katie and Craig's past, especially after the first flashback of them meeting each other for the first time at the ski resort. However, once I was nearing the end, I was very caught up in Katie's present story, so when the flashbacks of Craig started coming into the story more frequently at that time, I just found those chapters to be distracting and I was impatient to get back to the present moment. I wouldn't want those scenes to be taken out completely, but I would have enjoyed them more at the begining of the book.All in all, I thought this was an engaging read and I'd like to check out some of Michael Schiavone's short stories now too.*This was a first-reads win from Goodreads*
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Call Me When You Land by Michael Schiavone tells the story of a family struggling to understand their past to move to a better future. At least a future different and more satisfying than their past. Each character carries "baggage" which prevents any progression for them to function better. A main cahracter, Katie, tries to be an artist, but is at an impasse not able to find new directions for her art. She works as a waitress/bartender in a local joint without any satisfaction. Her life isn't dreary enough we find her childhood and young adult years to be barren of love and caring. Her father lacked compassion or caring for his daughters and her mother was mentally ill and used alcohol as a self-medication. Katie marries a man who himself lived an abusive childhood and leaves his wife and child "with both agreeing upon it'" She has a relationship of sorts with a wrestling coach who gets her pregnant, but leaves for Oregon with another woman who is leaving her children and husband behind. Katie's son, C.J., struggles with who he is, who his father is and where he fits in the world. Walter, retired physician and uncle to Katie, is dying from terminal cancer and is slowly wasting away in Katie's home. An older sister of Katie, Caroline, is the opposite of Katie - organized, successful and contolling everyone about her. Into this mix a motocycle is delivered to the house. A motorcycle from Greg, who is deceased.From that point on each character must resolve the conflict evident in their life to move beyond the present stalmates; Katie wants to be an artist, drinks too much and lives in a dead-end job; Katie conflicts with C.J.; Walter with his disease; C.J with who he really is and where his father disappeared. Katie and Caroline bristle over their vacant choldhoods. The end brings a feeling of at least two, Katie and C.J. moving towards a life they want to live rather than a life forced upon them. Walter dies and Caroline and Katie resolve some of their frustrations.I had a difficult time becoming involed with the story, it is very unlike my experience. However, as the characters became more familier and the events and people who effected their lives becomes evident I found myself pulled into the story. The changes from present to past were not a problem for me, but the sensation at the end of how they were going to do was positive, but also ambiguous - as life often is. Just as the title Call Me When You Land implies. I enjoyed this book and give it a 3.5 stars
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    "Call Me When You Land" had the potential to be very engaging. But the characters seemed a bit hollow and not fully drawn. There were lots of interesting threads that could have been woven into a deeper story. I enjoyed the book while I was reading it, but got to the end and thought to myself, "Is that all there is? There could've been so much more."
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I was looking forward to receiving this book to review because I am the mother of 2 teenage boys. I found however that the main character was unlikeable and I could not relate to her at all. Written as it was in the voice of the main character, a mother who denies her alcohol addiction, struggling artist, whose ex husband dies and wills his son his motorcycle. It does not delve deep enough into the characters or their motivations to keep you engaged in the story. Frankly if I did not feel the need to write a review for the book I would not have finished it at all. The family dynamics are scewed and unrealistic and the story is very superficial.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I finished this book a while ago but haven't reviewed it because I don't know what to say! The writing is nice. Katie was very real for me but I didn't like her very much. The other characters are also believable. Caroline should have visited sooner, she added some hope to mix. The story is realistic. It was an okay book just not my usual kind of read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Schiavone begins his novel with a death. An impetus for change. Katie, a single mother of a 15 year old son, learns of the death of that son's father. It takes a while for the author to flesh out Katie's relationship with Craig, the dead man. The author meanders through the year 2007 and the day to day life of the mother and son as they deal in their own ways with Craig's death. The arrival of the Harley Davidson that Craig left to Katie really spurs the confrontation between mother and son. It serves as an obvious symbol of escape. Perhaps Katie, having given up her dreams of escape when she found herself pregnant with CJ, resents his attraction to his own visions of escape. The mother's fears for the safety of her child mix with the yearning desires of a rebellious teenager who wants distance from the person he has been closest to his whole life. It is a classic recipe for a novel. This novel does not live up to what it could have been.I found the character of Katie to be very fleshed out and real. I know people like Katie. They talk themselves into control over their addictions. They talk themselves out of necessary confrontations or dialogues. Her son, CJ, is a bit less defined, but what 15 year old boy isn't? At first, I did not mind the flashing between present time and memories. I never lost track of which time was being described. But the memories cropped up at odd intervals, sometimes stretching for an entire chapter and other times for a mere paragraph. The writing has some problems, but nothing major enough to break my concentration. I sometimes got lost as to which "she" a sentence subject referenced.In a memory about breastfeeding CJ, Katie refers to her "boobs" and the word sticks out like a sore thumb in a paragraph that impresses tenderness between mother and child.While the story of these two main characters felt true to me, I found myself extraordinarily distracted by the pop culture and brand name references. Everything from Top Gun to Capri Sun to Best Buy stilted the flow of the book. If these references had been more generalized, the book may have held my interest for longer stretches of time. I kept having to put it down and it felt like work to pick it up again.The minor characters were interesting, but I wanted some of the bit players to be more involved. There was one young girl bussing tables at the bar/restaurant where Katie works that I expected to play a larger role once Katie learned that she attended the same school as CJ. But that character never reappeared. I think I expected a bit more after the first few chapters and the book never filled my expectations. I did like the story, but did not entirely believe the journey.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Call Me When You Land was a pleasant surprise. I didn't expect to enjoy it so much, as I typically dislike books that rely heavily on dialogue to tell stories. However, I quite enjoyed the story of this mother-son relationship, as well as the pretty in depth characterization of the main character, Katie. As far as liking the character herself, she was deeply flawed, hated her sister for the same faults she herself carried (although at least her sister has her life together and tries, again and again, to reach out and help her sister and nephew, even paying Katie's cable and credit card bills even though Katie tells her to "pay it and then fuck off") and complaining that her son wouldn't open up to her but every time he attempted to speak to her about anything all she did was nag him, tease him, push him away and deny any wrongdoing of her own. She does this to anyone around her, throwing insults around (although even though she can dish it out, she certainly can't take it when anyone tries to tell her to grow up and realize what a damn mess she is) and never offering a shoulder even when someone, like her husband, is literally begging for it. She is certainly overly judgmental and narrow minded, and often borders on neglectful or abusive of her son. However, as a character she is fairly believable, even if I wouldn't want to know her personally. Maybe it's my age or the fact that I'm not a mother yet, but I felt more for her son, C.J. than for Katie. He obviously had concerns for her, wanting to know more about his father and was stuck in the midst of teenagerdom with no where to turn. Another reason I had to roll my eyes at Katie is her complaining about C.J. needing a man to look up to, when Walter was right there in their own house, playing video games and offering words of wisdom. Walter, in fact was my favorite character, and although she came in later in the novel, I really enjoyed Caroline as well. Overall, this book was quite an enjoyable read, and while it's no masterpiece or instant classic, it was fun to escape into something easy to read and entertaining. Although, I do believe Michael Schiavone should consider writing screenplays or theater, as his writing would carry well over into visual media, while his novel still falls a little flat as a complete reading experience, jolting the story with bands, name brands and other unneeded descriptions that always date a book too quickly, ruining the experience for anyone who reads the book five, ten years in the future, or just someone who reads to escape pop culture. Somehow mentioning TV shows and band posters rings false in literature, like the author is trying too hard to be hip and up to date with bad cultural references. Still, recommended for anyone thinking about picking this up, although I wouldn't go out of my way to tell someone to read it, and without a question, the best Early Review book I've ever had the pleasure to receive in my mailbox.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Often when I finish a book and haven't loved the characters, it is tempting to feel that the book was itself not good . Upon reflection, the fact that these characters continue to needle at my thoughts would argue that this is, in fact, a very good story with uncomfortable characters. The actions and intentions of these characters are raw, destructive, and at times, without redemption. An alcoholic, single mother with chronic black-outs; a teen-age son with anger issues; a great-uncle facing his own death and often stoned; these are tough characters to "like", but the description of the individuals is so complete and so vivid that it is difficult to let them go at the end of the story. My only true complaint lies in wanting to know more of CJ and his mind. We see him through his mother's eyes, but never get to know his as well as I wished. His return at the end of the novel is somewhat anticlimactic.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    If Nancy Pearl had to categorize this book for one of the chapters in Book Lust this would easily fit into her "Families in Trouble" chapter. First, there's Katie Olmstead. Alcoholic, artist, single mother slowly losing her grip on reality. Then there's Katie's reality, C.J., the angst-ridden son. C.J. is uncommunicative, lonely and lost. Finally, there's great-uncle Walter. Coughing up blood, stoned, patient and pathetic. Parsing out words of wisdom to said mother and son while quietly raging against his own frailty. Spoiler: he disappears from the story halfway through; a disappointment because he was the glue that held mother and son together.All of these characters fit an eye-rolling stereotypical mold. Katie, in a spurt of mothering, makes her son breakfast. C.J. isn't used to seeing his mom awake much less standing at that hour is skeptical and more than a little suspicious. Their dialogue is full of cliche zingers like, "what's your deal this morning?" and "I'm not poisoning you." Character development is minimal. People like Peter and Caroline pop up without introduction. There is a lot of backtracking to fill in the blanks.To be honest I read this book like it reads: in fits and starts. It wasn't the kind of book I could read for hours on end without coming up for air. I was frustrated by all the name brand products. Aquafina, Alka-Seltzer, Aleve, Advil, Best Buy, Barolo, Benadryl, Ben & Jerry's, Coors, Claratin, Cabernet, Capri Sun, Chips Ahoy, Clearasil, Dunkin Donuts, Disney, Dewars, Diet Coke, Dairy Queen, Desitin, Dolce & Gabbana, Emergen-C, Eggos, Febreze, Fruit Rollup, Gap, Gatorade, Grand Marnier, Halo 3, Hydroxycut, Hot Pocket, iPhone, J. Crew, Joy, Keds, Kools, Kleenex, Liz Claiborne, Mountain Dew, McDonalds, Marc Jacobs, Odwalla, Pepsi, Pellogrino, Palmolive, Prozac, Ray-Bans, Ritalin, Rockstar, Rice-a-Roni, Ragu, StairMaster, Starbucks, Sprite, Snuggie, Shiraz, Splenda, SeaWorld, Timberland, Tylenol, Trader Joe's, Target, Tag, Tuff, Tropicana, Tanquerey, Under Armour, Visine, Vasaline. I know I could list a dozen more. If this were a movie the product placement would be nauseating. Writing should be timeless. If the products aren't around ten years from now the piece becomes dated and clunky. There is the danger of alienating the reader as well. Not everyone will know what Halo 3 or Rockstar is. Something gets lost in translation when the product is the punchline to a funny line.What I liked best about Call Me When You Land is the potential for a happy ending. The promise of change is hanging in the air. Differences are happening and that's all that matters.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This novel is about a woman approaching 40, single mother of an angry teen age son CJ (Calvin James -- his mother hates the name). Katie has a drinking problem -- Gran Marnier is her drink of choice -- and works as a bartender but is something of an artist. She inherited her house or would not be able to support herself. Her great-uncle also lives with her but he is dying. And she has a sister, successful in some vague business, who helps with finances and comes to visit, giving the two of them the opportunity to talk about their terrible childhoods and for the sister to urge Katie not to drink so much.It is difficult to become invested with Katie or her son, she always drinking herself to oblivion, he having terrible rages. When CJ's father dies suddenly and far away, Katie and CJ inherit his Harley Davidson leading Katie to drink more and CJ to lust after the motorcycle.There is some talk about people needing to be free -- CJ's father believed that and so does Katie, to a degree -- and much counsel for Katie to quit drinking. Mostly we turn the pages -- not really wondering why these people are the way they are, not really caring what will happen to them -- waiting for the end which comes abruptly and unconvincingly
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really loved this book, and read it quite quickly. Once I started I couldn't put it down. I felt a real connection with the relationship between Katie and CJ. It reminded me so much of the relationship I had with my mother when I was a crazy teenager. And Walter is exactly like my grandfather was. I think that anyone can find a bit of their family in this book. The only complaint I have is that I would have liked to have more explanation about CJ's return. But overall, I fell in love with this book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This review is for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. For a first time novelist, I would rate this book a 2 1/2 to 3 stars. It did keep my interest to the end and it was a quick read for me. The main character, Katie, could have been developed better; she was everybody's victim, including herself, right up to the end. Her teenage son, CJ, seemed to be from the seventh level of Hades, and the story's end came rather quickly. The low point of the book for me came on page 62 (in the ARC), "Though short for a man - five feet seven like her - Peter seemed taller because of his confidence. In bed, he was more than she'd anticipated, more than she really wanted. It took Katie awhile to accomodate his presence within, to learn how to make it work for her; and he was patient, aware of his endowment, sensitive to her predicament. And though she'd be sore for days afterwards, Katie took a perverse pleasure in knowing she'd really been ****ed."Come on!!! This is a man describing a woman's reaction, and it just didn't work for me. As far as CJ, I wanted Katie to put him in his place, or something besides kowtowing to his every whim and outburst.On the other hand, my favorite part was the hockey game. Very well described, I felt like I was there.This book has it's strengths and weaknesses, but I would give this author another chance should he write a second book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is well-written except for an an occasional jarring remark like "She had to pee so bad hernback teeth hurt.' This isn't intended to be humorous or to advance the action in any way. Indeed, there is no humor or wit or irony in this book. Nor does there have to be, but a novel, for me, does have to have a character whom I care about, and, usually, one who develops or at least learns.This is peopled with the most disconnected characters found in literature. We know what Kate is sloshing down every day, not that the details of her alchohoiic tastes are interesting or germane. She has no friends. She hasn't had a relationship with another man since her first husband, an obvious sickie, abandoned her and their baby son. The son, now the teenager from Hell, is unaffectionate, uncommunicative, rude, nasty, seemingly friendless, and occasionally violent. I think we're supposed to think that this is because his father abandoned him when he was 9 months old. What arrant nonsense! Plenty of single mothers raise nice young men. Kate's rationale for not having a relationship since her husband left is that she didn't want to hurt her son. That's arrant nonsense as well. Bringing children into a new marriage is too ordinary even for comment.The most attractive human being is Great-Uncle Walter, who spends his days stoned.The tacked on ending is, I suppose, intended to convey that the emotionally dead Kate will havena new life. However, it seems more likely that she is going to be reliving the last 18 years with the same results. She has learned nothing. She has still not managed a human relationship.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Katie Olmstead deals with family issues throughout “Call Me When You Land,” and they threaten to grind her up. Our portrait of this almost-forty Massachusetts single mom is so close, I checked after finishing the book to see whether I was remembering it wrong – but no, it’s written in the third person, but the point of view is so Katie-centric that it has the feel of a first-person narrative.The first event we encounter in this narrative is the far-off death of Katie’s son’s father, an event that shakes Katie and her son CJ. Something about this event also rattles the already-threadbare bond between mother and son, and drives Katie deeper into the bottle. In fact, Katie imbibes alcohol from the first page onward in this book, a habit that author Michael Schiavone very effectively shows to be quite alarming. CJ acts out on the hockey rink where Katie can witness it, and probably in other places where she can’t. Drink reduces Katie’s inhibitions and she drags a former boyfriend back to bed for incautious and self-absorbed gratification. Throughout, Katie drinks and drinks, and then drinks some more, and then drinks because her hangover is so bad.Katie’s cluelessness and denial in the face of all the male characters cannot ultimately eclipse the gleaming, monstrous Harley Davidson Road King motorcycle which CJ’s father bequeaths to him. This ticket to ride, that CJ’s biological father leaves for his son, wonderfully encapsulates the idea that CJ can get away to a place where he can finally become the focus of his mother’s attention. And Katie’s reaction to CJ’s flight is one of the true keys of this well-told novel – a non-act that forms the heart of the action and sets Katie’s spiral on a more hopeful course. Katie’s character wore me down for much of this story, I’ll be honest. I’m definitely glad I stuck with her, though, and with this debut novel of Mr. Schiavone’s. What he sets out to do, he does with style and depth. He’s definitely at one with telling the human story, and I do hope it’s a territory he explores again very soon, and very often.

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Call me When You Land - Michael Schiavone

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