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Buckeye
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
One town. Two families. A secret that changes everything. "A small-town novel of epic proportions" (Tom Perrotta), this captivating story weaves the intimate lives of two midwestern families across generations, from World War II to the late twentieth century. "I love this book with my entire heart."--Ann Napolitano, New York Times bestselling author of Hello Beautiful In Bonhomie, Ohio, a stolen moment of passion, sparked in the exuberant aftermath of the Allied victory in Europe, binds Cal Jenkins, a man wounded not in war but by his inability to serve in it, to Margaret Salt, a woman trying to obscure her past. Cal's wife, Becky, has a spiritual gift: She is a seer who can conjure the dead, helping families connect with those they've lost. Margaret's husband, Felix, is serving on a Navy cargo ship, out of harm's way--until a telegram suggests that the unthinkable might have happened. Later, as the country reconstructs in the postwar boom, a secret grows in Bonhomie--but nothing stays buried forever in a small town. Against the backdrop of some of the most transformative decades in modern America, the consequences of that long-ago encounter ripple through the next generation of both families, compelling them to reexamine who they thought they were and what the future might hold. Sweeping yet intimate, rich with piercing observation and the warmth that comes from profound understanding of the human spirit, Buckeye captures the universal longing for love and for goodness.
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review
Kboltz
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Pickpick

Excellent read. Two families that become entwined. Margaret the adopted girl who cannot live peacefully and Cal who cannot enlist in WW11 bc of his one short leg. Set in Ohio, this story goes through time and is a story about friendship, love, loss and secrets. Excellent.

review
Suet624
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Pickpick

Chris Whitaker said glowing things about this novel at the National Book Festival so I purchased it immediately. This story spans decades & centers around characters I grew to care for. The damage that war creates, the need to hide your sexual identity, the repercussions of being an orphan, a woman who talks with spirits, & an affair that ties two families together are all part of the story. Forgiveness is the ultimate message. I really liked it.

squirrelbrain Great review! ❤️ 1w
Suet624 @squirrelbrain Thank you! 1w
See All 13 Comments
SamAnne I‘m in line at the library. Appreciate the review. 1w
Suet624 @SamAnne I hope you can get it soon. 1w
Amiable I‘m next in the library queue! 1w
Suet624 @Amiable 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 1w
Reggie Nice review. Stacked. 1w
Suet624 @Reggie I wonder if your book club would like it. 1w
Mattsbookaday Waiting for my library hold on this one to come through. I‘m excited! 1w
Suet624 @Mattsbookaday I hope you like it! Seemed to have mixed reviews on Litsy but Goodreads folks liked it. 1w
Amiable My library hold just came in! I‘m diving in now. 6d
Suet624 @Amiable awesome. I‘m still thinking of a few of those characters. 5d
53 likes6 stack adds13 comments
review
Bookbuyingaddict
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Pickpick

4 1/2🌟 first half of this narrative I absolutely loved & would be a 5star read BUT…..more than a few flaws in the latter part, lots of specific dates of historical events which the characters skimmed around with no real depth or feeling which is odd as the heart break & longing in the first part of the story is so powerful, the last 100 odd pages are flat again “things/life/death events”happen but with no real feeling, or maybe that‘s just me.

Bookbuyingaddict Also I‘m not convinced Mr Ryan knows or can write women/female characters that well , personally I didn‘t think Margaret, Becky or Ida had real depth which is such a shame, I loved the storyline of Becky‘s talent & knew nothing about that when I picked it up. Still read most of it on a flight & it kept me turning the pages living the life‘s of these people so really enjoyed it just disappointed with the ending 2w
Kboltz You are so correct…the women in this book could have been so much more important and detailed. Especially Margaret. 🤔 5d
45 likes2 comments
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bio_chem06
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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I pushed through and I‘m 50% of the way through and I just don‘t care about any of these characters. Am I the only one? I could put this down and not pick it up again and really not care.

JHSiess Different strokes for different folks, as the song goes. Loved this book. Couldn't put it down. Highly recommend it. ⭐⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ 4w
6 likes1 comment
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TrishB
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Pickpick

Good inter generational US family saga 👍🏻 Enjoyed my first Gladstone‘s read.

TrishB Sorry forgot to tag everyone! 1mo
LeahBergen I hope you‘re all having a wonderful time! 1mo
TrishB @LeahBergen it‘s wonderful as always 😁 1mo
72 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
marleed
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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I read one book when I was in completely the wrong mood, but everything else went from solid B to an A+. I‘ll take it!

5 ⭐️= Loved It, would recommend to others. A+
4 ⭐️= Liked it, would love to discuss. Solid B
3.5 ⭐️ = Close to either pick or so-so
3 ⭐️= Meh, no need to discuss. Avg C
2 ⭐️=Nope D
1 ⭐️=DNF F

eeclayton Seems like a pretty good reading month ☺️ 1mo
50 likes1 comment
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VRM1975
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
Pickpick

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review
Megabooks
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Mehso-so

Perhaps without the hype I would‘ve enjoyed this one more. Lots of anachronisms, which drives me bananas. I liked the start with the parents, but when it got to their kids‘ lives it devolved into trite, well trod boomer lit fic. The narrator was great, which was good because it was almost 16 hours!!

AmyG Thanks for this post. Saved me from reading this. As a U of Michigan Wolverine, I do not want to read a book titled Buckeye. Iykyk 🤣 2mo
sarahbarnes @AmyG 😂😂😂 2mo
Chelsea.Poole @amyg we are buckeyes here, so I can imagine how yucky this title is for you lol! 2mo
See All 15 Comments
Chelsea.Poole Sorry to hear this one didn‘t work for you. I have this on audio and had high hopes. I‘ll temper my expectations. 2mo
AmyG @Chelsea.Poole Ha! And let me say….you might just be my favorite Buckeye. 2mo
Chelsea.Poole @AmyG right back at you! (Wolverine!) 2mo
Megabooks @amyg @Chelsea.poole I'll always have a soft spot for THE OSU because it was the first veterinary school I was admitted to. (They do rolling admissions.) But I dated a guy, who went to Michigan, so I had a lot of GO BLUE at one point in my life. I'll just say my dog is no longer in that fight lol! I hope you like it more than I did. It has a good rating on the storygraph, so it's probably an #unpopularopinion! 2mo
Suet624 That's a bummer - I saw Chris Whitaker at the National Book Festival and he talked about how it was the best book he'd read in a long time. So of course I bought it. Who knows when I'll get to it... 2mo
JHSiess I have never heard the phrase “boomer lit fic“ until now. Frankly, I have only a vague idea what that is, but I'm sure it's insulting to a whole generation. As a baby boomer, and daughter of the Greatest Generation, I found this book absorbing, moving, relatable, and full of themes to be discussed and considered. I love historical fiction, particularly World War II-era. There is much to be learned from people like my parents who served & survived. (edited) 4w
JHSiess @Suet624 I attended a Zoom with Chris where he said the same thing. And a Zoom with the author, Patrick Ryan, who is thoughtful, eloquent, and delightful. Ignore the snotty comment about “boomer lit fic,“ read the book, and decide for yourself. I loved it & enthusiastically recommend it. Younger readers especially can learn much about the world & life by reading it.⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐⭐ (edited) 4w
Megabooks @JHSiess what I meant by “boomer lit fic” had to do with the narrative arcs of the characters of baby boomer generation. There weren‘t any new insights that this particular author brought versus others I‘ve read. I understand reading things that reflect on your own generation and experiences is really nice and probably a richer experience than I get reading this. When I find an author born in my microgeneration ⬇️ 4w
Megabooks (1978-1982), I tend to like it more or read it with more nuance than a writer about boomers. When I read the Greatest Generation characters in this book, I felt I had some surprises, the characters and plot in the Boomer generation I could‘ve told you exactly where he was going with them. And that made it less enjoyable for me. (And that‘s me having read over 2000 books in the last 6 years.) @JHSiess (edited) 4w
Megabooks @JHSiess probably my favorite multigenerational book with baby boomers is this one that employs a lot more creative storytelling. 4w
Suet624 @JHSiess I‘ll definitely read it and I agree with @Megabooks about The Nix. 4w
BarbaraBB @JHSiess I think ‘boomer lit fic‘ is a description of what to expect. Like ‘millennial angst‘ novels. It‘s not meant to be offending! (edited) 4w
71 likes15 comments
review
marleed
Buckeye | Patrick Ryan
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Pickpick

This story started so slow that I wasn‘t sure if I would stick with it, but now I can‘t believe I even considered giving up on the story. I fell into these characters, Felix and Margaret, Cal and Becky, Skip and Tom, and oh my goodness, Everett. He paints a vivid picture of two families in a small Midwestern town moving through mid 20th century America. It‘s a beautiful story.

AnnCrystal Love this book magic, when a story suddenly begins singing our tune 🪄📚💝. 2mo
marleed @AnnCrystal It‘s the best book feeling! 2mo
Suet624 I purchased this book due to a recommendation of Chris Whittaker‘s. Then I started seeing so-so reviews. I‘m really glad to see that you liked this one a lot. 4w
72 likes2 stack adds3 comments