Listen Stewart talk about Henry, Himself at the Life in the 614 podcast from The Columbus Dispatch.
[download MP3]
Listen Stewart talk about Henry, Himself at the Life in the 614 podcast from The Columbus Dispatch.
[download MP3]
The latest batch of reviews for The Odds.
Can Art and Marion revive their marriage?
What do you do when you’re in your 50s and have been laid off, your house is about to be foreclosed on and you’re on the brink of bankruptcy and divorce? If you’re Art and Marion Fowler, the couple in Stewart O’Nan’s endearing new novel, you head for Niagara Falls and try to beat the odds.
The Columbus Dispatch
Troubled couple give marriage a final throw of the dice
The Odds gambles without flaunting how much it’s putting at stake.
Stewart O’Nan, whose fictional territory is the microscopic changes of everyday life, here enters the more colorful region of romance.
And not romance in the elegant, sophisticated sense. He tackles the cheesiest of situations — Valentine’s Day at Niagara Falls, where proposals, marriages and honeymoons are at their heights. Out of this sappy setup, he makes a subtle study of marriage, with its complicated system of rewards and risks.
The L.A. Times
In ‘The Odds: A Love Story,’ Stewart O’Nan uses a light but steady touch to provide an intimate portrait of a couple in crisis.
There is a clarity to O’Nan’s prose: It doesn’t call attention to itself, doesn’t flaunt dazzling sentences or stunning descriptions. This may undersell his work, which is delightful. There is something movie-like in it — not that this should be a movie, as his novel “Snow Angels” was — but it’s movie-like in its easy immersion. Cracking open “The Odds” is like settling back to watch a film as the theater lights come down: It plays out, brightly, before your eyes.