Landslide: A novel
By (Author) Susan C. Conley
Random House USA Inc
Random House Inc
25th October 2022
5th September 2022
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
288
Width 132mm, Height 203mm
This beautiful portrait of a family in a fishing village in Maine is "a fresh look at marriage,motherhood, and the wondrous inner lives of teenagers. A trulybeautiful and unforgettable love story of a family on the brink" (Lily King, author of Writers & Lovers). A must-read from the critically acclaimed author of Elsey Comes Home. "I loved Landslide. You are right there with them in a fishing village in Maine, feeling the wind, the sea, the danger. Smart, honest, and funny, this is a story you won't forget." -Judy Blume, best-selling author of In the Unlikely Event After a fishing accident leaves her husband hospitalized across the border in Canada, Jill is left to look after her teenage boys-"the wolves"-alone. Nothing comes easy in their remote corner of Maine- money is tight; her son Sam is getting into more trouble by the day; her eldest, Charlie, is preoccupied with a new girlfriend; and Jill begins to suspect her marriage isn't as stable as she once believed. As one disaster gives way to the next, she begins to think that it's not enough to be a caring wife and mother anymore-not enough to show up when needed, to nudge her boys in the right direction, to believe everything will be okay. But how to protect this life she loves, this household, this family With remarkable poise and startling beauty, Landslide ushers us into a modern household where, for a family at odds, Instagram posts, sex-positivity talks, and old fishing tales mingle to become a kind of love language. It is a beautiful portrait of a family, as compelling as it is moving, and raises the question of how to remain devoted when the eye of the storm closes in.
A New York Times Editor's Pick One of the Good Morning America, New York Post, Bustle, Biblio Lifestyle, and The Medium's Most Anticipated Books A "Must-Read" from O. Magazine, Marie Claire, PopSugar, and Southern Living .
Enveloping and warm . . . [Susan Conley] has a gift for writing tiny, meaningful interactions. Sam asks if they can quietly read next to one another, a sweet leftover from when he was young that he hasnt let go of. Charlie comes in and lies on top of them a boys gesture at physical communion and they all silently surrender to love.Cold sets in, and the Archers move off their little island for the coming long, dark season, just as Sam drifts out of reach and Jill frets more over her husbands return than she did his absence. But winter is the season of wolves: They are prepared for hardship . . . Conley isnt afraid to inject a little hope that [the boys] will find their way back home.
Hillary Kelly, TheNewYorkTimesBook Review
In this enveloping novel, a mother of teenage boys tries to find her footing in coastal Maineafter her husband is injured in afishing accident. Little crack havesprouted in every inch of thefortification around this familys life, and Conley shows their battle to keep vulnerability at bay.
TheNewYorkTimes
Stunning . . . Conley is masterful in her storytelling. She writes confidently about Jills growing lack of confidence in her own parenting skills. She nails the angst and doubt faced by parents of teenagers. Additionally, she assigns Jill the task of narrating on behalf of her wolves, which is no small feat . . . Conley has navigated the fissures of a family in crisis with her usual restraint and humor all of it set against a backdrop of the states rugged coastline. The result is a slice of contemporary Maine life thats as engaging as it is universal.
Joan Silverman, Portland Press Herald
"Landslide by Susan Conley is a supple examination of the sweet, enduring electricity generated by the ever-present pairingsof darkness and light, fear and security, love and loss. If it sounds like a novel for our current predicament, current opportunity, thats because it is. Landslide is wise and vulnerable, while Conleys sweet, dry humor allows us sips of hope for the wonderful characters herein."
Rick Bass, author of For a Little While
With spare yet evocative prose, Susan Conley beautifully renders here the tug and pull of what it means to be the only woman in a family of men, a woman who is trying to raise two boys on an island off the coast of Maine, while also tending to her injured fisherman husband, while also trying to be the film maker she has always hoped to be. Landslide is not only a wonderfully compelling portrait of a dying industry and the people who make their living from it, it is also a love letter to the enduring nature of family itself and the ties that bind us all.
Andre Dubus III, author of Gone So Long
I loved Landslide.Susan Conley is such a spare, eloquent writer. Her characters are richly but economically drawn, in this case Jill's two teenaged sons called the wolves,' and at the heart of the story is a marriage that may or may not come apart.You are right there with themin a fishing village in Maine, feeling the wind, the sea, the danger, just as you feel Jill's worries, frustrations, her longings, her love for her family. Smart, honest, and funny, this is a story you won't forget.
Judy Blume, author of In the Unlikely Event
"Susan Conley has knocked it out of the park with Landslide.It is aspectacular tale of hardship and healing told in Conleys gorgeous, luminous prose. Funny, moving, and deeply insightful, the noveltakes such a fresh look at marriage,motherhood, and the wondrous inner lives of teenagers. A trulybeautiful and unforgettable love story of a family on the brink."
Lily King, author of Writers & Lovers
From its very first page, Landslide gives the complete and deeply satisfying pleasure of a great novel: a fully realized world peopled by characters you feel you know, or used to know, or wished you knew better. Complicated people trying to sort their way through complicated lives, and the complications are the stuff of ordinary human beings: a mother struggling to manage her teenage sons, her wolves,a fishing village in Maine staring down its end, a man in a hospital room miles from his family, and the sharp knife of accident that cuts through our days. As always, Susan Conleys work allows for the best sort of vanishing. And I went gladly.
Sarah Blake, author of The Guest Book
Landslide is a powerful portrait of a woman trying to hold herself and her family together in a moment of crisis. With startling clarity, Susan Conley captures the heartache, elation, intensity, and joy of motherhood and charts the emotional life of teenaged boys. Effortlessly readable and engrossing.
Christina Baker Kline, author of The Exiles and A Piece of the World
"This psychologically probing novel, about a fisherman's wife guiding her teenage sons through a family crisis, isa shockingly honest examinationof both the destructive and healing properties of mother love.It kept me reading past bedtime.
Monica Wood, author of One and a Million Boy
"Life in Susan Conley'swondrousnew novel Landslide is full of a nagging sense that the past was better than the future could ever be. But it's full of sweetness, and hope, too.A funny, fond, and rueful take on what life on the Maine coast is like after thetourists leave, Landslide will stick with you, and leave you rooting for the flawed family at its heart, even when they sometimes find it hard to root for each other.An unforgettable book.
Brock Clarke, author of Who Are You, Calvin Bledsoe
Conleys stunning new novel is about the global concerns that bind us all, while also being deeply, sustainably, intimately local.Conleyknows about women among menand women raising menas thoroughly as she knows the peculiarities, struggles, and habits of coastal Maine. As emotionally meaningful an experience as Ive had, as a reader, in just about forever.
Heidi Julavits, author of The Folded Clock: A Diary
"If D.H. Lawrence had written Sons and Lovers from the maternal perspective, and set his story on the modern coast of Maine, the result would very likely be this novel. Landslide is not only a vicious meditation on the bond between mothers and sons, but a quietly subversive reckoning with the Maine of our literary imagination. So many writers have turned to our coast as a source of innocent beauty; Conley instead reveals how these tidal zones can betray us, and curse us with all of the anger and resentment, sacrifice and pain that can only be redeemed by a searing commitment to love. This is a really powerful book. It cuts right to the bone.
Jaed Coffin, author of Roughhouse Friday
A compelling portrait of family life, deferred dreams and middle age."
New York Post, "Best new novels of winter 2021: 9 must-reads for fiction lovers"
A modern-day mother in Maine has to care for her teenage sons after her husband is hospitalized post-fishing accident. She wrestles with how to support her family in more ways than one in this gorgeous read."
Zibby Owens, Good Morning America
"In spare, incisive prose, Conley captures the beauty and might of nature, a mothers awesome drive to protect her children, and the fraught trial and error inherent in navigating the complexities of multigenerational family relationships."
Booklist
An invigorating, informative read. Jills strong voice throughout gives a sense of immediacy, and the prose is punchy, economical, and wry. We learn how fishing quotas impact her towns shaky economy and how gentrification is overtaking Maines harbor towns, a context that elevates the story beyond mere domestic drama.
Library Journal
Written with humor and grace, Conley crafts a narrative about the many cruelties a family can inflict upon their own while also conveying the delicate ache of a mother watching her children grow away from her. This poignant family portrait explores the daily chaos many parents can relate to, like financial struggles and the volatile nature of adolescents."
TinaMarie Craven, Hearst CT Media
If youve been reading nonfiction and taken a break from reading novels, Landslide by Susan Conley might be a good fictional story to lure you back in . . . Unlike so many books of the day, this one has a lovely ending. Not a cliche, not a sappy ending, just an ending to make the reader satisfied and happy.
Mims Cushing, The Florida Time-Union
I was reminded of this study in contrasts when I picked up Susan Conleys new novel, Landslide. At the center of thebookis Jill, whoafter a brief foray to Europe in her youthreturned to fictional Sewall, Maine, to marry her longtime love, Kit Archer.A loving portrait of a flawed family trying their best to muddle through, both individually and together.
Norah Piehl, Bookreporter
Conley is at her best when chronicling the very real forces Jill balances while walking a fine line between empathizing with and laying down boundaries for her children. . .A compelling portrait of a family trying to stay afloat and weather every storm life throws at them.
Kirkus
Immersive . . . Conley is at her best capturing Maines coastal terrain as well as Jills emotional turmoil. Through her disarmingly authentic family portrait, Conley speaks volumes about changing ways of life.
Publishers Weekly
"Motherhood, loosely defined, was at the center of Conleys first two novels, and it is again here in her third, a taut family drama that unfolds after the protagonists husband is injured in a commercial-fishing accident and shes left to manage two teenage sons on her own.
Down East Magazine
Landslide is a powerful portrayal of modern parenting, marriage and family unity that cleverly reveals just how difficult these things can be in this age of social media addiction, teen peer pressure and economic uncertainty . . . Conleys writing is crisp and vivid, especially the dialogue between mother and sons, wife and husband. There is some humor, but its muted in favor of the real-life family drama she so convincingly exposes.
The KennebecJournal/Morning Sentinel
"Conleys novel represents a kind of landslideof setbacks and confrontations, uncertainty and disquiet. Conley deftly traces the mood swings as the family navigates reprimands, accusations, and Instagram. In the end Landslide is about family and community and how fragile each is . . . Self-reliance will only get you so far; eventually, youll need help. This book is about the cycle of innocence lost and foundand re-found. Kudos to Conley for bringing this painful and promising world to life.
The Working Waterfront
"A main theme is how families use language, touch, glance and gestureto see and know each other, to read each other and connector not. The novel reminds us that especially in times of trouble and change, its important to keep talking. Landslide looks perceptively as this landscape of love. What factors can a parent control and what factors does a parent have no control over These high stakes are at the heart of the novel. The suspense is all too real.
Maine Women Magazine
"Susan Conleys latest book, Landslide, is a beautiful, spare novel about motherhood, adolescence, Maine, middle age, and marriage. Its a novel about the struggles and challenges of living in our current world, but it is also filled with humor, light, and gorgeous descriptions of the sea. Its a perfectly balanced novel, and because of this, its hard to put down. You might find yourself reading this compelling novel in one sitting!"
Literary North
What a remarkable story! I was immediately drawn into this familys story and loved the setting of a tiny Maine fishing village. I loved the conclusion of this book and the way the author reveals that everything is not always black and white. I felt Jills interactions with her sons were all incredibly realistic, as painful and funny as they are in real life. I couldnt wait to see what they would do next! The title of the book is very fitting as it parallels the Stevie Nicks song, and what happens when your life comes crashing down around you."
The Book Bellas
"I can already tell that Landslide will end up on my Best Books of 2021 list. Everything about her latest story resonated with me. Jill affectionately thought of her sons as the wolves, a perfect metaphor for teenage boys. The constant worry, the guilt she felt, the sacrifices she made, the quandary that is all teenage sons . . . Conley got it ALL exactly right.
Novel Visits
SUSAN CONLEY grew up in Maine. She is the author of four previous books including Elsey Come Home. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Paris Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, Harvard Review, New England Review, and Ploughshares. She has received multiple fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, as well as from the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, the Maine Arts Commission, and the Massachusetts Arts Council. She has won the Maine Literary Award and the Maine Award for Publishing Excellence. She is a founder of the Telling Room, a youth creative writing center in Portland, Maine, where she lives and teaches on the faculty of the Stonecoast Writing Program.