Welcome Guest Search | Active Topics | Members | Log In | Register

Hallstrom, "Bound On Earth" Options · View
Mark Brown
Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2008 1:17:16 PM

Rank: AML Member

Joined: 10/25/2007
Posts: 24
Points: 72
Location: Detroit, MI
Author: Angela Hallstrom
Title: Bound on Earth
Publisher: Parables
Date: 2008
Trade paperback
197 pages
ISBN 10: 0-9614960-9-6
ISBN 13: 978-0-9614960-9-8
$12.95

Bound On Earth is a rarity among a lot of contemporary literature and especially among the sub-genre of LDS fiction. It is unlike many stories published in the annual O. Henry or Best American collections in its sense of compassion for the characters. Rather than portraying the Palmer family as a collection of freaks and walking dysfunctions as is so popular to do, the book shows the characters as flawed and difficult, humane and striving, sympathetic and, ultimately, deserving of compassion. This is not to say that each member of the family has some easy, trite heroic moment or epiphany. On the contrary, it is their ordinariness, their familiar every-day-ness that makes them so authentic and relevant. A reader won't feel as though he or she is looking at a display behind glass in a literary museum with this book. Readers will feel as though they are visiting home, sitting next to familiar siblings, friends, and relatives at the dinner table.

Rather than the cold, arm's-length distance one has come to expect from authors who seem only able to focus on dysfunction, betrayal, and emotional disaster and death, Hallstrom ably and realistically portrays real people with real struggles. She does it in a way that never insults the reader's intelligence or lets the characters off the hook. The humanity and compassion for its characters and, by extension, for its readers are what set Bound On Earth apart from most of what you can find on the New Fiction shelf these days.

What sets the book apart from a lot of LDS fiction has to do with what the book is not. It isn't any of the things that are normally conjured by the label of "LDS literature." It isn't historical fiction like The Work and The Glory, it isn't weepy stuff targeted at youth like Jack Weyland's stuff, it isn't a missionary narrative. Nor is it centered around someone's struggle with faith and the climax is all about whether or not the hero stays in the church.

The book is distinguished even from wonderful, classic LDS novels like The Backslider simply because it is contemporary. Hallstrom has written about Mormon life as it is right now. This isn't a reformulation of some glorious historic heritage nor is it a fossil of LDS culture from the past. These stories are finely crafted tales that both speak to and show the experience of being a Latter-Day saint in the late 20th and early 21st century.

It's not intellectually popular to talk too much about emotional involvement with a book. It's okay to talk about themes, motifs, possible interpretations, extra-textual connections, etc. but it's quietly, definitely frowned upon to to just talk about how much you love a particular character or event in a story. Too much emotion is unseemly in the academic world. Emotion isn't thought, it might be said.

Nevertheless, I've got to say that I loved this book and I loved these characters. I saw pieces of myself and my loved ones in them and that, I think, is a large part of why people read -- to know that we are not alone in the universe. Bound On Earth makes me feel like I am in good company.

Of everyone, I have to say that I have a bit of a literary crush on the character of Beth. She's the youngest daughter of the Palmer family and her narratives are the head, tail, heart, and funny bone of the book of the book. My heart about broke apart during her Sunday Story of her trying to help her mother around the house as a five year old and I laughed out loud while reading about her crush on her high school English teacher. Her struggles to love and forgive a damaged spouse later in her life struck me as utterly authentic.

It's a small book, just over 200 pages, but it is a substantial, worthwhile read that makes you feel as though you have met people, been places, and done things. It's well worth the small price to buy and ship it to your door.
jeffneedle
Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2008 1:45:40 PM

Rank: Moderator

Joined: 10/21/2007
Posts: 122
Points: -207
Location: Chula Vista, CA
Hi, Mark. Thanks for these notes. I'm about 1/4 of the way through the book. I'll post my review when I'm done.
Wm Morris
Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2008 2:18:59 PM


Rank: AML Member

Joined: 10/9/2007
Posts: 51
Points: 459
Location: Minnesota
In case anyone missed it, there's information on how to buy the book, a link to a Q&A I did with Angela and more in this thread on the discussion board:

http://forums.mormonletters.org/yaf_postst296_Angela-Hallstroms-iBound-on-Earthi.aspx


A Motley Vision: Mormon Arts and Culture
Andrew Hall
Posted: Friday, February 22, 2008 1:55:14 PM

Rank: AML Member

Joined: 10/26/2007
Posts: 59
Points: 186
Location: Denton, TX
A short but very positive review by Julie M. Smith at Times and Seasons.

http://www.timesandseasons.org/?p=4410
Darlene Young
Posted: Friday, February 22, 2008 5:43:20 PM


Rank: AML Member

Joined: 10/26/2007
Posts: 55
Points: 168
Location: South Jordan, UT
I just have to once again assert that I think this is one of the best works of LDS fiction yet produced, and I am tickled to death that it comes from an AML-er. Angela claims (and I have no doubt) that the AML community had a hand in bringing it about--if by nothing else than by giving her someone to write for. And it's been so enjoyable to me to read something that I am the ideal audience for. A deeply satisfying experience. Way to go, Angela!
Users browsing this topic
Guest


Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.

Main Forum RSS : RSS

Powered by Yet Another Forum.net version 1.9.1.8 (NET v2.0) - 3/28/2008
Copyright © 2003-2008 Yet Another Forum.net. All rights reserved.
This page was generated in 0.073 seconds.