Thanksgiving Night

Thanksgiving Night by Richard Bausch, published by Harper Collins on October 3, 2006, is a novel that explores the complexities of family dynamics and relationships. Set in the small Virginia valley town of Point Royal in 1999, the story unfolds against a backdrop of societal anxieties and personal struggles. The narrative centers on Oliver Ward, his divorced daughter Alison, and their interactions with Holly Grey and her aunt Fiona, alongside Holly’s son Will and his second wife Elizabeth.
Readers will find a rich tapestry of characters navigating their intertwined lives, each grappling with their own challenges and desires for connection. The novel delves into themes of love, family life, and the search for belonging, all while incorporating elements of humor and romance. With 403 pages, this edition offers a detailed look at the characters’ journeys, revealing their flaws and eccentricities as they seek understanding and affection amidst the chaos of their lives.
Official synopsis Publisher
Richard Bausch calls this, his tenth novel, “a love comedy with sorrows.” The story is set in the small Virginia valley town of Point Royal, where several of Bausch’s other novels and many of his stories take place. It is 1999; predictions of catastrophe blare on the radio, and religious fanaticism is everywhere on the rise. The millennium is approaching.
Oliver Ward and his divorced daughter, a young policewoman named Alison, and Oliver’s two grandchildren become involved with Holly Grey and Holly’s aunt Fiona, elderly ladies with a marked propensity for outlandish behavior. Holly’s son, Will Butterfield, and Elizabeth, Will’s second wife by that name, have been happily married for ten years but are about to discover how fragile happiness is.
And in the middle of all of them is an old priest, Father John Fire, who is a good man, thinking of leaving the priesthood. He is called “Brother Fire” by everyone who knows him, after the famous words of Saint Francis when confronted with the burning brand with which he would be martyred. Close to both Holly and Fiona, Brother Fire also has a part to play in the rapidly unfolding family drama.
Thanksgiving Night is a touching and empathetic portrayal of family$—the one we have, and the ones we make. The people who populate these pages are flawed, wounded, stubborn, willful, scarred, often wildly eccentric, and all searching, in one way or another, for love.1006
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