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The View From Mount Joy

Review

The View From Mount Joy

THE
VIEW FROM MOUNT JOY starts out a lot like one of those John Hughes
movies I loved when I was a teenager (Pretty in Pink,
The Breakfast Club, etc.). Although the high school here
is set about 15 years earlier (the book opens in 1971), you're
presented with the same intriguing cast of characters: the
Good-Looking Jock who is also Smart/Has a Heart of Gold, the Golden
Girl Cheerleader and her Hockey Captain Boyfriend, and even the
Hero's Smart, Wise-Cracking Best Friend Who Happens to Be a Girl.
But no sooner do we get all these classic character types
established than things begin to turn, and you realize that this
novel might be more like a bittersweet look back at a John Hughes
class reunion than what it appears to be at the onset.

The narrator, Joe Andreson, begins his senior year at Ole Bull High
School when his mother moves his family to Minneapolis in search of
a new start following the death of his father. There, Joe meets
Kristi Casey, the Head Cheerleader and undisputed star of Ole Bull
High. Although Joe's best friend, the smart and artistic Darva, is
not taken in by the aura of Kristi, Joe is soon under her spell ---
and finds out that she's not the sweet or innocent cheerleader the
school believes her to be. It's not long before they're involved
(sexually, if not romantically), and Joe starts to learn that
behind Kristi's golden girl smile glints the hard steel of
ambition.

As for Joe himself, he has big plans for a successful hockey career
and looks forward to his college success on the ice. But as the
novel progresses, things don't play out as expected. Ultimately,
Joe's existence revolves around his family and his work in a pretty
uneventful way. Meanwhile, Kristi is led by her ambitions into a
life that seems about as different from Joe's as one could imagine.
Darva and Kristi both come back in and out of Joe's life, with
wildly dissimilar results. As life unfolds for these characters,
Lorna Landvik explores the meaning of happiness and invites readers
to take a close look at how we define success.

The novel's hero is a very warm and likable protagonist, though he
comes across as a bit too good to be true --- and for a tough
hockey player, he spends an awful lot of time crying. As much as I
grew to like Joe, I never really got the sense that I understood
him as well as the other characters, who were somewhat more complex
yet easier to comprehend. Still, Landvik --- the bestselling author
of ANGRY HOUSEWIVES EATING BON BONS --- has a sure touch with a
storyline. Her book's timing and smooth pace make for a great
end-of-summer read.

If you never made it back to a high school reunion, then maybe the
view from mount joy will offer you a glimpse of what might have
happened to some of those schoolmates --- and give you an
opportunity to realize the successes in your own life.

Reviewed by Lourdes Orive on January 24, 2011

The View From Mount Joy
by Lorna Landvik

  • Publication Date: September 4, 2007
  • Genres: Fiction
  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books
  • ISBN-10: 0345468376
  • ISBN-13: 9780345468376