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Book cover of Good Remains
World Literature, Fiction Subjects

Good Remains

by Nani Power
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Overview

Power, author of the acclaimed Crawling at Night, introduces Dr. C. R. Ash, a neonatologist and chronic bachelor, the last in line to an old Southern family name. During a snowy prelude to a much-anticipated hospital Christmas party, C. R. crosses paths with a world of local characters, living and dead: from Betty, his fire-fearing secretary and her cohort, Dr. Pendleton Compton; to C. R.'s lascivious best friend who mends the hearts of babies; to Kirsten, a candy striper who teeters between the worlds of childhood and child rearing; to a clutch of death-obsessed teenagers; to two amateur caterers striving to create a Dickensian world of magic for the overworked and bedraggled hospital staff. In a town adrift with housing developments, strip malls, and Civil War history, the members of this motley assemblage are all impelled by their search to solve the ancient human riddles of love, loss, and desolation.

Synopsis

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year, Nani Power's The Good Remains is an enchanting tribute to Dickens's A Christmas Carol that follows a beguiling cast of characters in a small Virginia town heavy with history. Dr. C. R. Ash is a neonatologist and chronic bachelor, the last in line to an old Southern family name. During a snowy prelude to a much-anticipated hospital Christmas party, C.R. crosses paths with a world of local characters, living and dead: from Betty, his fire-fearing secretary; to C.R's lascivious best friend, who mends the hearts of babies; to Kirsten, a candy striper who teeters between the worlds of childhood and child rearing; to a clutch of death-obsessed teenagers; to two amateur caterers striving to create a Dickensian world of magic for the overworked and bedraggled hospital staff. In a town adrift with housing developments, strip malls, and Civil War history, this motley assemblage are all impelled by their search to solve the ancient human riddles of love, loss, and desolation.

Publishers Weekly

Antihero C.R. Ashs scrambled vision of the world might be due to bourbon; on the other hand, it might be due to Powers addiction to a sort of Faulknerian stream-of-consciousness style. In any case, C.R., the aging neonatal specialist at the center of Powers second novel (after the critically acclaimed Crawling at Night), is suffering from three problems: a chronic nostalgia for the world of his Confederate ancestor, Shrub Ash, who died at the battle of Balls Bluff, Va.; a chronic inability to connect to any woman who mentions the word marriage; and, most pressingly, the judgment of the Balls Bluff Babies Hospital governors, seconded by his conscience, that he is responsible for the death of Baby Hodges, aka Tuffy. Tuffy was the unexpected offspring of a teenage candy striper, Kirsten, for whom C.R. has the hots. The babys father, 16-year-old Todd Redman, learns of his fatherhood through the high school grapevine. It freaks Todd out, sending him to find companionship with his next-door neighbor, the school acid-head, Hermie Carson. Kristens, Todds and C.R.s troubles come to a head at the hospitals Christmas party, catered by Todds mother, Diane. All the ghosts come out on that night, from Hermies suicide father to Balls Bluff battle veterans. It takes a while for the different strands of the novel to develop into full-fledged story lines, but the readers patience will be rewarded by the black humor Power mines from this likably wacky town. Agent, Wendy Sherman. (Sept.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Antihero C.R. Ashs scrambled vision of the world might be due to bourbon; on the other hand, it might be due to Powers addiction to a sort of Faulknerian stream-of-consciousness style. In any case, C.R., the aging neonatal specialist at the center of Powers second novel (after the critically acclaimed Crawling at Night), is suffering from three problems: a chronic nostalgia for the world of his Confederate ancestor, Shrub Ash, who died at the battle of Balls Bluff, Va.; a chronic inability to connect to any woman who mentions the word marriage; and, most pressingly, the judgment of the Balls Bluff Babies Hospital governors, seconded by his conscience, that he is responsible for the death of Baby Hodges, aka Tuffy. Tuffy was the unexpected offspring of a teenage candy striper, Kirsten, for whom C.R. has the hots. The babys father, 16-year-old Todd Redman, learns of his fatherhood through the high school grapevine. It freaks Todd out, sending him to find companionship with his next-door neighbor, the school acid-head, Hermie Carson. Kristens, Todds and C.R.s troubles come to a head at the hospitals Christmas party, catered by Todds mother, Diane. All the ghosts come out on that night, from Hermies suicide father to Balls Bluff battle veterans. It takes a while for the different strands of the novel to develop into full-fledged story lines, but the readers patience will be rewarded by the black humor Power mines from this likably wacky town. Agent, Wendy Sherman. (Sept.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Power, whose debut, Crawling at Night, was a Los Angeles Times Book Award finalist, here rethinks Dickens's A Christmas Carol. Her setting, though, is contemporary small-town Virginia, and her characters are various doctors, nurses, and candy stripers anticipating the much-needed hospital Christmas party. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2003
Publisher
Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Pages
323
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780802140227

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