Synopses & Reviews
What are the limitations of what we do and don't know about our hearts? Oprah Book Club author Melinda Haynes, hailed as "the real thing, a true artist, a genuine writer" (the Cleveland "Plain Dealer)" for her bestselling debut, "Mother of Pearl, " returns with a tender, heartbreaking, and occasionally hilarious novel set in the 1970s.
Willem Fremont has spent his adult life held tight inside the clenched fist of panic disorder. Determined to break the pattern -- even as he reaches his twilight years -- Willem returns to his childhood home in Purvis, Mississippi, where he believes the solution lies. There he discovers his father's acreage in the hands of the idiosyncratic Till family. Eilene, mother of Sonny and Bruno and "no bigger than a dress form," pretends to be deaf as a way of dealing with her grown boys -- each of whom suffers from inertia. Sonny, hugely fat, perennially unemployed, and looking for love, is building a shrimp boat in his mother's landlocked backyard. Bruno, who has returned from Vietnam with a spinal injury and wearing a brace, escapes into the glossy pages of old "National Geographics" while his wife, Leah, tries to find a small measure of comfort in the day-to-day tending of their farm.
From these unsettled lives comes a story of reconciliation against all odds and a vision of rekindled love as well as a compassionate portrait of small-town life that celebrates the unusual, embraces the unwanted, and opens its arms to all lost souls in search of a home. Steeped in the traditions of great southern storytellers like Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner, "Willem's Field" is nonetheless a wholly original and vividly imaginative novel by a brilliant and assured writer.
Synopsis
Willem Fremont is dealing with a disorder of unknown origin or remedy. Now in his sixties, Willem is usually able to function perfectly well, but at other times, he falls apart and has massive panic attacks. For years, Willem has run a successful leather goods business in Colorado, but he becomes consumed by his illness and determined to discover its roots. He believes it is related to a past trauma, and that he can cure himself if he returns to Mississippi. For it was there that Willem's house collapsed into a sinkhole and he suffered a near-death experience that has forever altered the course of his life.
Willem longs to return to "normal" life -- but he soon discovers that there is no such thing, as the author explores the question: "What are the limitations of what we do and don't know about our own hearts?"
In rugged and beautiful prose, Melinda Haynes paints a picture of Southern life in the 1970s as it wrestles with the decline of the family farm, the political unrest caused by the integration movement, and the Vietnam War. Steeped in the traditions of great Southern storytellers like Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner, Willem's Field is nonetheless a wholly original and vividly imaginative novel from a brilliant and assured writer.
Synopsis
What are the limitations of what we do and don't know about our hearts? Oprah Book Club