Synopses & Reviews
A once-charmed family is forced to confront the devastating tragedy that struck it years ago in this fiercely tender tale of betrayal and reconciliation Its the fall of 2007, and Emily Ascher should be celebrating: she just got engaged to the man she loves, her job is moving in new and fulfilling directions, and her once-rocky relationship with her mother, Laura, has finally mellowed into an easy give-and-take. But with the promise of new love
Settling into old comes a difficult look at how her family has been torn apart in the many years since her brother died. Her parents have long since divorced, and her father, Joe, a famous actor and playwright who has been paralyzed with grief since the tragedy, carries the blame for his sons death—but what really happened on that winter night? Why has he been unable to clear his name, or even discuss that evening with Laura and Emily?
As spring looms—and with it Emilys wedding in the Berkshires and an unveiling of Joes new play—each Ascher begins to reevaluate the events of long ago, finally facing the truth of his or her own culpability in them. Moving between past and present over the course of sixteen years, The Embers is a skillfully structured debut novel of buried secrets and deep regrets that crush a family while bonding its members irrevocably.
Review
“A riveting examination of a high-profile clan and its fall from grace. . . . The Embers builds like the fire its title conjures, glowing a little, then suddenly bursting into sparks of narrative that make it nigh on impossible to put down. . . . The Embers will inspire readers to examine their own judgments about those they love, and perhaps give someone another chance. Bass is a new author with an old soul, and a talent worth tending.”—Joy Tipping, Dallas Morning News
“In this fiercely tender story by Hyatt Bass, a new engagement forces one young woman, her mother and her estranged father to rehash a painful tragedy locked away in their past so she can finally move on.”—InStyle (One of InStyle Magazines Top 5 Beach Reads for Summer 2009)
“A moving tale about griefs tenacious hold and the road to redemption.”—People (A “Get Set for Summer” Pick)
“Bass . . . is a sensitive observer of family dynamics, of the way people can fail to really see the ones they love. . . . THE EMBERS [is] contemplative and psychologically attuned.”—Laurie Muchnick, Bloomberg.com
“A very assured and beguiling debut novel”—Ben Dickinson, Elle.com (One of Elle.coms “Top Ten Smartest, Sizzlingest Beach Reads”)
“Bass's well-paced, nuanced family saga is as engrossing as it is empathetic. Sure to appeal to readers who enjoy such family dramas as Judith Guest's Ordinary People.”—Library Journal (starred review)
“Director, producer and screenwriter Bass creates a riveting narrative that digs into the notion that ‘there is nothing that happens to a child that does not implicate the parent in some way. . . . Basss excavation of a complex familial labyrinth is an elegant testament to the beautiful mess that is family.”—Publishers Weekly
“First novels shine too. In filmmaker Hyatt Basss The Embers, newly engaged Emily and her parents finally begin coping with the death of Emilys brother.”—Barbara Hoffert, The Phoenix, “The Best in Summer Reading”
“The Embers is the sort of novel Im always hoping to find—from the first page, I was transfixed. Hyatt Basss lyrical story of a broken family is, in a word, stunning. The Embers is the best book Ive read in a long time.”—Amanda Eyre Ward, author of How to Be Lost and Love Stories in This Town
“What is more powerful a place than the family? It's the center of our lives, and the crucible of our experience: The Embers, Hyatt Basss lovely first novel, asks questions that only the family can answer, and delivers truths that only the family contains.”—Roxana Robinson, author of Cost
“Ten minutes into The Embers, I was completely hooked. Each member of this struggling family is portrayed with so much empathy and intelligence. The pacing is excellent, and the prose is exact. Reading it was a thought-provoking pleasure.”—Laura Moriarty, author of The Rest of Her Life and The Center of Everything
Review
"
The Embers is the sort of novel Im always hoping to findfrom the first page, I was transfixed. Hyatt Basss lyrical story of a broken family is, in a word, stunning.
The Embers is the best book Ive read in a long time."Amanda Eyre Ward, author of
How to Be Lost and
Love Stories in This Town"Director, producer and screenwriter Bass creates a riveting narrative that digs into the notion that ‘there is nothing that happens to a child that does not implicate the parent in some way. . . . Basss excavation of a complex familial labyrinth is an elegant testament to the beautiful mess that is family."Publishers Weekly
"What is more powerful a place than the family? It's the center of our lives, and the crucible of our experience: The Embers, Hyatt Basss lovely first novel, asks questions that only the family can answer, and delivers truths that only the family contains."Roxana Robinson, author of Cost
“Ten minutes into The Embers, I was completely hooked. Each member of this struggling family is portrayed with so much empathy and intelligence. The pacing is excellent, and the prose is exact. Reading it was a thought-provoking pleasure.”Laura Moriarty, author of The Rest of Her Life and The Center of Everything
Review
“A riveting examination of a high-profile clan and its fall from grace. . . . The Embers builds like the fire its title conjures, glowing a little, then suddenly bursting into sparks of narrative that make it nigh on impossible to put down. . . . The Embers will inspire readers to examine their own judgments about those they love, and perhaps give someone another chance. Bass is a new author with an old soul, and a talent worth tending.”—Joy Tipping, Dallas Morning News
“In this fiercely tender story by Hyatt Bass, a new engagement forces one young woman, her mother and her estranged father to rehash a painful tragedy locked away in their past so she can finally move on.”—InStyle (One of InStyle Magazines Top 5 Beach Reads for Summer 2009)
“A moving tale about griefs tenacious hold and the road to redemption.”—People (A “Get Set for Summer” Pick)
“Bass . . . is a sensitive observer of family dynamics, of the way people can fail to really see the ones they love. . . . THE EMBERS [is] contemplative and psychologically attuned.”—Laurie Muchnick, Bloomberg.com
“A very assured and beguiling debut novel”—Ben Dickinson, Elle.com (One of Elle.coms “Top Ten Smartest, Sizzlingest Beach Reads”)
“Bass's well-paced, nuanced family saga is as engrossing as it is empathetic. Sure to appeal to readers who enjoy such family dramas as Judith Guest's Ordinary People.”—Library Journal (starred review)
“Director, producer and screenwriter Bass creates a riveting narrative that digs into the notion that ‘there is nothing that happens to a child that does not implicate the parent in some way. . . . Basss excavation of a complex familial labyrinth is an elegant testament to the beautiful mess that is family.”—Publishers Weekly
“First novels shine too. In filmmaker Hyatt Basss The Embers, newly engaged Emily and her parents finally begin coping with the death of Emilys brother.”—Barbara Hoffert, The Phoenix, “The Best in Summer Reading”
“The Embers is the sort of novel Im always hoping to find—from the first page, I was transfixed. Hyatt Basss lyrical story of a broken family is, in a word, stunning. The Embers is the best book Ive read in a long time.”—Amanda Eyre Ward, author of How to Be Lost and Love Stories in This Town
“What is more powerful a place than the family? It's the center of our lives, and the crucible of our experience: The Embers, Hyatt Basss lovely first novel, asks questions that only the family can answer, and delivers truths that only the family contains.”—Roxana Robinson, author of Cost
“Ten minutes into The Embers, I was completely hooked. Each member of this struggling family is portrayed with so much empathy and intelligence. The pacing is excellent, and the prose is exact. Reading it was a thought-provoking pleasure.”—Laura Moriarty, author of The Rest of Her Life and The Center of Everything
Synopsis
A once-charmed family is forced to confront the devastating tragedy that had struck it years ago, in this skillfully structured debut novel of buried secrets and deep regrets that crush a family while bonding its members irrevocably.
Synopsis
A
People Magazine "Get Set for Summer Pick"
One of InStyle Magazine's Top 5 Beach Reads
Blessed with beauty, talent, and a loving family, the Aschers seem to have it all. Joe and Laura are the toast of New York--a wildly successful playwright and a wealthy, well-educated actress. Then one winter night, seventeen-year-old Thomas dies, and the Aschers lose everything. More than a decade later, as their daughter Emily's wedding approaches, the family yearns to reconnect. But in order to do so, Joe, Laura, and Emily will first have to confront the tangle of blame, guilt, and long-held secrets that tore them apart. Shifting between past and present over the course of sixteen years, The Embers is an utterly gripping and exquisitely tender story of a family struggling to reconcile the past and embrace the future.
About the Author
Hyatt Bass wrote, directed, and produced the film 75 Degrees in July, which was released in 2006. The Embers is her first novel.
Reading Group Guide
1. What were your first impressions of Emily and her family? How did your opinions of them shift as you learned about their shared history? What are the most striking differences in the way they each experienced Thomass death?
2. Did anyone do anything “wrong” during the therapy session with Dr. Shepherd, or was the impasse between Emily and Joe simply already too great? What did Joe really mean when he blurted out, “I didnt do anything”?
3. Joe and Lauras marriage was on rocky ground even before Joes affair and the events surrounding Thomass death. Why were they growing apart? Did their difficulties seem insurmountable?
4. Emily and Thomas have a complicated—though loving—relationship. How did the dynamic between them compare to your own experience of siblings? Could you understand Emilys need to act out during Thomass illness? Could her parents have done more for her during that period?
5. How does Earl handle his role as a stepfather and second husband? Does Laura respond to him differently from the way she responded to Joe? Do the two men have any traits in common?
6. What does Ramons case represent to Emily? What makes her well suited to her job as his attorney?
7. Clay and Emily experience a turning point in their relationship on their holiday ski trip. What was at the source of their fights? Were you rooting for them to work things out? How do their personalities complement each other?
8. What memories does Ingrid stir in Joe? In turn, what does she need from him? Did learning the truth about who Ingrid really was surprise you?
9. What were Joes motivations in taking Thomas on a trip to the country? How were Laura and Emily affected not just by Thomass death but by the way he died? Do the circumstances that led to Thomass pneumonia warrant blame?
10. What does The Embers reveal about trust and authentic love? What enables the Ascher family to grieve and to feel hope again? Has your family experienced a similar loss that was never fully addressed?