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Schroder: A Novel
by Amity Gaige
Published: 2013-02-05
Hardcover : 272 pages
Hardcover : 272 pages
2 members reading this now
2 clubs reading this now
2 members have read this book
2 clubs reading this now
2 members have read this book
A lyrical and deeply affecting novel recounting the seven days a father spends on the road with his daughter after kidnapping her during a parental visit.
Attending a New England summer camp, young Eric Schroder-a first-generation East German immigrant-adopts the last name Kennedy to more ...
Attending a New England summer camp, young Eric Schroder-a first-generation East German immigrant-adopts the last name Kennedy to more ...
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Introduction
A lyrical and deeply affecting novel recounting the seven days a father spends on the road with his daughter after kidnapping her during a parental visit.
SCHRODER relates the story of Eric's urgent escape years later to Lake Champlain, Vermont, with his six-year-old daughter, Meadow, in an attempt to outrun the authorities amid a heated custody battle with his wife, who will soon discover that her husband is not who he says he is. From a correctional facility, Eric surveys the course of his life to understand-and maybe even explain-his behavior: the painful separation from his mother in childhood; a harrowing escape to America with his taciturn father; a romance that withered under a shadow of lies; and his proudest moments and greatest regrets as a flawed but loving father.
Alternately lovesick and ecstatic, Amity Gaige's deftly imagined novel offers a profound meditation on history and fatherhood, and the many identities we take on in our lives--those we are born with and those we construct for ourselves.
Editorial Review
Amazon Best Books of the Month, February 2013: Eric Kennedy has a lot of explaining to do. First, thereâ??s the matter of his fabricating a Massachusetts seaside childhood to hide his East German roots--and his appropriation of the Kennedy name at age 14, a switch he never mentioned to his wife. Then thereâ??s his desperate sort-of accidental post-divorce abduction of their precocious six-year-old daughter, Meadow. Inspired partly by a true story, Amity Gaige's novel tracks the week Eric and Meadow spend on the road, days he remembers as some of the best of his life. This gorgeously expressed, slippery apologia from the once and future Schroder--sympathetic, even in his appalling negligence--limns the limits of self-made American identity, while paying tribute to the irrational exuberance of parental love. --Mari MalcolmDiscussion Questions
Suggested by Members
Discuss the significance of silence.
We're you sympathetic toward Schroder?
by gazzingo (see profile) 05/22/14Book Club Recommendations
Recommended to book clubs by 1 of 1 members.
Cheese sandwiches, butterscotch cookies.
by gazzingo (see profile) 05/22/14We had little tea sandwiches and because Schroder called his daughter butterscotch we had butterscotch cookies. You could also serve mountain dew for a beverage.
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