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Bridge of Sighs
Richard Russo

Knopf, 2007 - 544 pages

average customer review:based on 115 reviews
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Great Characters

I love Richard Russo's writing, so I wanted to read Bridge of Sighs. It is a nice, satisfying, long read and I enjoyed all the characters and learned to care about them. It is a story of family, love, loyalty, betrayal and all the good stuff that make up a good novel. I enjoyed Empire Falls and Nobody's Fool a bit more, but still a very enjoyable read. I'm always ready to pick up any book written by Russo. Give this one a try ! It will take you back to simpler times when the corner store was a mainstay in every neighborhood.


Maudlin, Gnawing, And Yes, Endearing -- Book of Sighs.....

In many ways this book is a mess. Russo is very wordy. He can't resist telling us what he then proceeds to show us. A couple of hundred pages could have been cut without compromising his story or the characters.
"People don't change" is a common theme throughout the book. Would that Russo didn't keep repeating that, and then showing evidence to support himself. But then again, perhaps writers don't change either.
Russo writes about people who live in small towns who have small dreams, which can be very fulfilling. His characters are deeply affected, and oftentimes profoundly scarred, by events that took place forty or fifty years ago. Events that will be repeated, ad nauseam.
The main character in "Bridge Of Sighs" is actually a family. The Lynch family to be precise. Its patriarch is a kind-hearted, man who never met a verb he could conjugate properly. He saw the good in everything, while his wife saw what was. Try as she might, she knew people wouldn't change, and.....
Lou jr., or Lucy as he's called, is writing an autobiography. His life couldn't be duller, and yet it is fulfilling. He loves his family, job and town. Many people would be very happy with his existence. But it isn't interesting literature. Lucy was picked on in school, save when he was with his friend Bobby Marconi, who was really a friend to his family, and only after Lucy had a girlfriend Marconi would have stolen in a heartbeat. Marconi is interesting, and his absences are felt just as strongly as his presence in the unraveling of this story. But as a protagonist, Lucy is too needy, dull, and cloying to help propel a great story.
What didn't happen in this novel is more interesting than what did (for the most part).
You really feel as if you intimately know all the characters, and charachatures Russo creates. But the ones you know most intimately, might be people you'd avoid knowing well in your own life. These are people you'd wish well, but not want to have at a dinner party.


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Yes, it's too long, but it's Immersive anyway...

I was hesitant to pick up this book, mostly because of its length, and also because I'd read some of the negative reviews here. But I greatly enjoyed Empire..., and finally decided to give it a chance.

I'm awfully glad I did. I'll agree with other reviewers that this book didn't need to be anywhere near as long. There were a couple of subplots that seemed tacked on for no good reason, and some of the backstory of Lucy's childhood felt superfluous. This is one reason for my giving the book only 4 stars, as well as the somewhat two-dimensional way Russo drew Lucy and his father. But the book really drew me in regardless, the town and townspeople felt incredibly real, and I looked forward to picking up the book each morning, reentering Lucy and Bobby's life. (Note that the story of Bobby's adult life in Italy wasn't quite as interesting to me as his childhood, so I have to admit that I did skip quickly through those pages.) The parallels between the lives of the children and adults are incredibly well depicted, just subtle enough not to be glaring. This really shows what a talented writer Russo is.



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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



Six years after the best-selling, Pulitzer Prize?winning Empire Falls, Richard Russo returns with a novel that expands even further his widely heralded achievement.

Louis Charles (?Lucy?) Lynch has spent all his sixty years in upstate Thomaston, New York, married to the same woman, Sarah, for forty of them, their son now a grown man. Like his late, beloved father, Lucy is an optimist, though he?s had plenty of reasons not to be?chief among them his mother, still indomitably alive. Yet it was her shrewdness, combined with that Lynch optimism, that had propelled them years ago to the right side of the tracks and created an ?empire? of convenience stores about to be passed on to the next generation.

Lucy and Sarah are also preparing for a once-in-a-lifetime trip to Italy, where his oldest friend, a renowned painter, has exiled himself far from anything they?d known in childhood. In fact, the exact nature of their friendship is one of the many mysteries Lucy hopes to untangle in the ?history? he?s writing of his hometown and family. And with his story interspersed with that of Noonan, the native son who?d fled so long ago, the destinies building up around both of them (and Sarah, too) are relentless, constantly surprising, and utterly revealing.

Bridge of Sighs is classic Russo, coursing with small-town rhythms and the claims of family, yet it is brilliantly enlarged by an expatriate whose motivations and experiences?often contrary, sometimes not?prove every bit as mesmerizing as they resonate through these richly different lives. Here is a town, as well as a world, defined by magnificent and nearly devastating contradictions. 




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