
Harper
Genre: Literary Fiction
Release Date: September 24, 2019
My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪
The Dutch House is a steady read. The pacing is by no means fast, but the detail of the characters’ lives was deep enough to keep me fully invested. There’s not a particular build or climax, but there doesn’t need to be. This is deeply a character study of Danny and his sister Maeve from childhood all the way through their lives. The pacing and general format of the plot reminded me somewhat of Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff.
I found it really interesting that this book was named after the house that Danny and Maeve lived in as children, until they were kicked out by their stepmother. Patchett illustrates the ways that the house continues to influence their lives, and brings them back to it in a beautiful full circle by the end of their stories. The home is very much a character in Danny and Maeve’s lives and, as such, their relationships with it ebb and flow over the years.
Patchett is able to carry the reader seamlessly through every new step in her characters’ lives: college, medical school, marriages, children, deaths, divorces, without the narrative ever feeling bogged down or too slow. There were times when I didn’t even realize how much time had passed until someone’s age was mentioned, which could feel a little startling.
Since I’m used to primarily reading thrillers, it is rare that a slow burn like The Dutch House will keep my interest and enjoyment the way this book did. It is clear that Patchett took time and care in truly getting to know her characters and mapping out their lives. I will say that the ending felt a little rushed compared to the rest of the narrative, but it was still a solid way to let the reader emerge from the lives they’d just been immersed in.
My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪
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