Blame, Michelle Huneven
Blame, Michelle Huneven
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Blame
A Novel

Author: Michelle Huneven

Narrator: Hillary Huber

Unabridged: 10 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/09/2009


Synopsis

Blame is a spellbinding novel of guilt and love, family and shame, sobriety and the lack of it, and the moral ambiguities that ensnare us all.Patsy MacLemoore, a history professor in her late twenties, has a brand-new PhD from Berkeley and a wild streak. She wakes up in jail after an epic alcoholic blackout. “Okay, what’d I do?” she asks her lawyer and jailers. In fact, two Jehovah’s Witnesses, a mother and daughter, are dead, run over in Patsy’s driveway.Patsy will spend the rest of her life trying to atone. She goes to prison, gets sober, and upon her release finds a new community (and a husband) in AA. She resists temptations, strives for goodness, and becomes a selfless teacher, friend, and wife.Then, decades later, another unimaginable piece of new information turns up. For the reader, it is an electrifying moment, a joyous, fall-off-the-couch-with-surprise moment. For Patsy, it is more complicated. Blame must be reapportioned, her life reassessed.

About Michelle Huneven

Michelle Huneven received a Whiting Writers’ Award in 2002, and has also won a GE Younger Writers Award in Fiction and a James Beard Award. Her first novel, Round Rock, was named a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year.

About Hillary Huber

Hillary Huber is one of the most successful voice talents in Los Angeles. Recent books read for Blackstone Audio include Him, Her, Him Again, the End of Him by Patricia Marx, A Field of Darkness by Cornelia Read, and A Map of Glass by Jane Urquhart.


Reviews

Goodreads review by K

Once again, a great premise and decent writing, while important, are not sufficient conditions for a great book. Once again, an author takes a complex story idea with rich potential and cops out by having it degenerate into Harlequin-worthy romance and ordinary family tale. Sigh. Imagine waking up fr......more

Goodreads review by Jade

Originally published at my blog Chasing Empty Pavements So my review of this novel is kind of like reviewing an old friend because I’ve been reading this book over the course of the last couple months for my Novel Writing class. Reading something over a couple months span I’ve realized has its pros.......more

If this book was 80 pages shorter I'd be writing how much I admired this masterpiece. Instead, I'm yawning. Patsy Maclemoore is no hero or survivor. For most of the book she is a conventional upper middle-class professor who finds herself in prison for half of the book and a wife and stepmother for t......more

Goodreads review by Leslie

I might destroy my credibility by making my first review five-stars, but I thought this book was wonderful: moving and surprising, unsentimental but unafraid to court deep feeling in its attention to characters and the quiet stasis of their pain, their small moments of redemption. I've often seen li......more


Quotes

“Like that other West Coast chronicler of struggling Americans, Raymond Carver…[Huneven] is not interested in literary pretension or postmodern razzle-dazzle, but in achieving a measure of truth—and her generous, engaging novel does just that.” New York Times Book Review

“Brilliant observations, excellent characters, spiffy dialogue, and a clever plot keep readers hooked, and the final twist turns Patsy’s new life on its ear. Huneven’s exploration of misdeeds real and imagined is humane, insightful and beautiful.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A sympathetic, well-wrought story of a brilliant young woman’s slow crawl toward self-understanding after her life is upended by a horrible accident…The satisfactions Blame offers readers are elegant prose and, deeper than that aesthetic pleasure, the intelligence and compassion Huneven brings to her characters. She holds them all with the utmost tenderness.” Los Angeles Times

“An elegant, hair-raising novel…Huneven’s prose is flawless, with especially arresting descriptions of the Southern California landscape, and her strong but fragile heroine is mercilessly honest.” New Yorker

“For Huneven, the blame of the title isn't some black-and-white object to explain or assign so much as it is something to explore in countless shades of gray. The result is a novel that combines the compulsive pleasures of a page-turner and the deeper satisfaction of true, thoughtful literature. A-” Entertainment Weekly

“Sly yet openhearted, Michelle Huneven’s Blame takes on the recovery movement in this novel about Patsy MacLemoore, a slightly wild, 20-something history professor involved in an alcohol-related crime. All too flawed, Patsy eventually finds redemption, only to wind up questioning her hard-won moral certainties later on. Think The Good Mother or House of Sand and Fog: It’s that good.” O magazine

“In her writing style, Huneven reminds me of Richard Russo: somber, but laced with elements of humor, friendship, and joy. She writes side characters so rich they could each carry their own novel…though Huneven’s take on addiction and recovery makes Blame a great read for anyone dealing with these issues, it’s also the kind of book that's perfect for someone who wouldn’t normally touch a book on the subject with a ten-foot pole.” NPR, Top Picks From Indie Booksellers

“Hillary Huber’s throaty voice and sarcastic undertones convey the character of young college professor Patsy MacLemoore…Both narrator and author keep to a solid pace as they trace Patsy’s growth during two years of prison—then her release, remorse, redemption, and much later, a startling revelation. Detailed sensory descriptions of Patsy’s life in Altadena Prison make convincing the story’s contrasting realities. Huber’s on-target portrayals of minor characters and her snappy rendition of spicy dialogue also contribute to the compelling listening.” AudioFile


Awards

  • Oprah’s Terrific Reads
  • Chicago Tribune Book of the Year
  • Washington Post Best Book
  • Kansas City Star Top 100 Book
  • Los Angeles Times Book Prize
  • National Book Critics Circle Award