Crossing to Safety
This book is amazing. It slowly unfolds before you in a way that many writers fail to do effectively. The beginning of the book was confusing but two chapters in, I could understand the format of flashbacks. This book is one of the few books that I have ever read that talks about disability. I won't say why or how because I don't want to spoil, but I deeply admire Mr. Stegner for never pitying characters who are ill. They have equally interesting character and descriptions. Mr. Stegner also does a fantastic job of following characters from young to old which leaves the reader with not only a complete timeline but also an attachment to the characters as well. This book is truly amazing and it really allowed me to reflect on myself. The narrator in the book quotes Chekhov saying,
"My own experience is that once a story has been written, one has to cross out the beginning and the end. It is there that we authors do most of our lying."
This quote resonated with me very deeply. We want endings and beginnings to always mean something, or to be perfect, and they rarely are. I though a lot about myself and how I'm in the middle of a journey and I can't predict the beginning or the end and that is what is most terrifying. William Stegner makes you prod deep into your consciousness while reading the tantalizing story of two intertwined families.
Overall this book is amazing. The characters are vivid and interesting. The relationships are deep and complicated. And most of all the writing is so amazing that one really begins to relate.