15
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
The Summer Friend
by Charles McGrath
Sponsored
Synopsis
A wistful look back at family, youth, and the intoxicating magic of New England summers, as well as a rumination on friendship and loss, by an esteemed writer and essayist and the former editor of The New York Times Book Review We all have vivid memories of ...
A wistful look back at family, youth, and the intoxicating magic of New England summers, as well as a rumination on friendship and loss, by an esteemed writer and essayist and the former editor of The New York Times Book Review
We all have vivid memories of summers past and the bright skin of youth: of those first days when school has ended; of long days of leisure and pleasure reading dog-eared paperbacks; of camps or cottages or vacation spots we returned to every year; of family road trips and their attendant stresses; of our sexual awakenings and longings; of first dates and becoming lovestruck; of fireworks and lawn games; of penny candies and thunderstorms and drive-in movie theaters; of bracing swims and inevitable sunburns; of outdoor showers and sandy feet; and, who can forget, of timeless friendships forged.
In The Summer Friend, Charles McGrath looks back at his younger days and the pleasures of summer with affection and longing, recalling with a gimlet eye experiences familiar to so many of us. But he also looks back with a clarity that suggests many of our memories may have become idealized over time. More than a tribute to seasons past, Summer is also a poignant story about friendship, about two men from different backgrounds who come together late in life, bonding over shared experiences, experiences born in the saddle of summer and beyond, and with children afoot. Later, when his friend is stricken with cancer, their relationship is imbued with new measure and meaning.
A paean to family, friendship and youth.
We all have vivid memories of summers past and the bright skin of youth: of those first days when school has ended; of long days of leisure and pleasure reading dog-eared paperbacks; of camps or cottages or vacation spots we returned to every year; of family road trips and their attendant stresses; of our sexual awakenings and longings; of first dates and becoming lovestruck; of fireworks and lawn games; of penny candies and thunderstorms and drive-in movie theaters; of bracing swims and inevitable sunburns; of outdoor showers and sandy feet; and, who can forget, of timeless friendships forged.
In The Summer Friend, Charles McGrath looks back at his younger days and the pleasures of summer with affection and longing, recalling with a gimlet eye experiences familiar to so many of us. But he also looks back with a clarity that suggests many of our memories may have become idealized over time. More than a tribute to seasons past, Summer is also a poignant story about friendship, about two men from different backgrounds who come together late in life, bonding over shared experiences, experiences born in the saddle of summer and beyond, and with children afoot. Later, when his friend is stricken with cancer, their relationship is imbued with new measure and meaning.
A paean to family, friendship and youth.
You May Also Like
Sleigh Bells and Snowstorms
Claire Kingsley
C++ for Kids: A fun and visual introduction to the fundamental programming language. (Programming Fundamentals for Kids)
Blaise Vanden-Heuvel
Monster Pucked
Clio Evans
Flush
Virginia Woolf
The New Evil: Understanding the Emergence of Modern Violent Crime
Michael H. Stone
The Charmed Library
Jennifer Moorman
Philosophy Picks
View All
Fight Oligarchy
Bernie Sanders
The Awe of God: The Astounding Way a Healthy Fear of God Transforms Your Life
John Bevere
Always Remember: The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, the Horse and the Storm
Charlie Mackesy
Separation of Church and Hate: A Sane Person's Guide to Taking Back the Bible from Fundamentalists, Fascists, and Flock-Fleecing Frauds
John Fugelsang
Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World
Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Blank Space: A Cultural History of the Twenty-First Century
W. David Marx