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Hello goodbye : a novel

Chenoweth, Emily (Author).
Book  - 2009
FIC Cheno
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 1400065178
  • ISBN: 9781400065172
  • Physical Description print
    273 pages
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : Random House, [2009]

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Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 28.95

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Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 1400065178
Hello Goodbye : A Novel
Hello Goodbye : A Novel
by Chenoweth, Emily
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Excerpt

Hello Goodbye : A Novel

February 1990   By the time Helen comes in from her run, the first sparks of dawn, pale orange and chilly, are reaching through the bare trees in the backyard. On the other side of the fence, across a gully cut by a thin creek, the neighboring hospital puffs steam into the morning. From its vents and chimneys and pipes, clouds rise, catching light in their curling forms, turning pink and then fading to white. She slides a filter into the coffeemaker, pours in the last of the dark grounds, and leans against the counter. She's been dizzy since her last mile, and sometimes when she turns her head quickly, her vision takes a moment to catch up: the breakfast table seems to wobble in the corner, and a silver blob resolves itself belatedly into the refrigerator. Call eye doctor, she scribbles on the grocery list, then adds Folgers below milk and  carrots.   When her daughter came home for winter break, Helen brewed endless pots of coffee; four months of college had turned Abby into a proper addict. She'd become a vegetarian, too, and a quasi- environmentalist, and an earnest proponent of domestic equity. She'd lectured Helen about the necessity of composting and talked at length about "the second shift," which had something to do with how Helen, like most American women, had to work outside the home as well as make the dinners and do the laundry.  When Helen went to college, there was Mass every day in the chapel and a dress code; one studied European history, geography, and psychology. Two decades later, her daughter is going to classes with names like "Literature of Conscience" and "Gender, Power, and Identity," in jeans with sagging knees and sloppy, fraying cuffs. She reads books about poverty and oppression, which she discusses in classrooms with the children of the privileged. Abby considers Helen oppressed, though she will admit that, on the scale of cosmic injustices, her mother doesn't have all that much to complain about.  Helen yearns for her daughter when she's gone, and she knows that Abby misses her, too. If Helen could, she'd go back to college with Abby-not to learn about poststructuralism or semiology, whatever those are, but just to watch her daughter's life unfolding. She'd live in a different dorm, of course, or even off campus. But she'd be nearby, for support, and maybe sometimes they could meet for tofu burgers at the student- run café. She knows this is ludicrous, but there is no schooling the heart.  She presses the start button on the coffeemaker, and it begins to make its comforting, burbling noises. The cat stitches itself around her ankles as she stands watching the first drops of coffee fall. Helen nudges her with her toe, but the cat comes back, purring, insistent. "Oh, Pig," Helen says. "Get a life."  She rubs her temples -Honestly, she thinks, maybe I should go lie down again- and then her thoughts turn to Regina McNamara, one of her favorite and most incorrigible kids, busted yesterday for underage drinking in the city park right next to the police station. Helen has been a counselor at the county juvenile court for almost a decade. She knows all the bad kids and all the formerly bad kids, and every time she pumps her gas or goes to the grocery store she runs into one of the reformed; helping them find jobs is one of her specialties. The coffeemaker hisses and bubbles. She stares at it, willing it to work faster, and in the corner of her eye there is a strange flash, like that of a lightbulb that has popped and burn Excerpted from Hello Goodbye: A Novel by Emily Chenoweth All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.