Ocean State
In the first line of Ocean State, we learn that a high-school student was murdered, and we find out who did it. The story that unfolds from there with incredible momentum is thus one of the build-up to and fall-out from the murder, told through the alternating perspectives of the four women at its heart. The murderer Angel, her mother Carol, and the victim Birdy, all come alive on the page as they converge in a climax both tragic and inevitable. Watching over it all is the retrospective testimony of Angel's younger sister Marie, who reflects on that doomed autumn of 2009 with all the wisdom of hindsight. Angel and Birdy love the same teenage boy, frantically and single mindedly, and are compelled by the intensity of their feelings to extremes neither could have anticipated. O'Nan's expert hand paints a fully realized portrait of these women but also weaves a compelling and heartbreaking story of working-class life in Ashaway, Rhode Island. Propulsive, moving, and deeply rendered, Ocean State is a masterful novel by one of our greatest storytellers
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Ocean State
In the first line of Ocean State, we learn that a high-school student was murdered, and we find out who did it. The story that unfolds from there with incredible momentum is thus one of the build-up to and fall-out from the murder, told through the alternating perspectives of the four women at its heart. The murderer Angel, her mother Carol, and the victim Birdy, all come alive on the page as they converge in a climax both tragic and inevitable. Watching over it all is the retrospective testimony of Angel's younger sister Marie, who reflects on that doomed autumn of 2009 with all the wisdom of hindsight. Angel and Birdy love the same teenage boy, frantically and single mindedly, and are compelled by the intensity of their feelings to extremes neither could have anticipated. O'Nan's expert hand paints a fully realized portrait of these women but also weaves a compelling and heartbreaking story of working-class life in Ashaway, Rhode Island. Propulsive, moving, and deeply rendered, Ocean State is a masterful novel by one of our greatest storytellers
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Ocean State

Ocean State

by Stewart O'Nan

Narrated by Sara Young

Unabridged — 5 hours, 45 minutes

Ocean State

Ocean State

by Stewart O'Nan

Narrated by Sara Young

Unabridged — 5 hours, 45 minutes

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Overview

In the first line of Ocean State, we learn that a high-school student was murdered, and we find out who did it. The story that unfolds from there with incredible momentum is thus one of the build-up to and fall-out from the murder, told through the alternating perspectives of the four women at its heart. The murderer Angel, her mother Carol, and the victim Birdy, all come alive on the page as they converge in a climax both tragic and inevitable. Watching over it all is the retrospective testimony of Angel's younger sister Marie, who reflects on that doomed autumn of 2009 with all the wisdom of hindsight. Angel and Birdy love the same teenage boy, frantically and single mindedly, and are compelled by the intensity of their feelings to extremes neither could have anticipated. O'Nan's expert hand paints a fully realized portrait of these women but also weaves a compelling and heartbreaking story of working-class life in Ashaway, Rhode Island. Propulsive, moving, and deeply rendered, Ocean State is a masterful novel by one of our greatest storytellers

Editorial Reviews

Library Journal - Audio

06/01/2022

"When I was in eighth grade, my sister helped kill another girl." The opening line of O'Nan's (Last Night at the Lobster) latest tells listeners right away that no punches will be pulled. This brief, high-tension audio follows the lives of four women as they ebb and flow around a catastrophic act of violence. Teenagers Birdy and Angel both love Myles, who's been with Angel for years. Birdy is thrilled when she and Myles begin a secret relationship; Angel is enraged to discover Myles's infidelity and puts most of the blame on Birdy. Angel's mother tries to keep her family afloat as husbands and boyfriends come and go, and Angel's quiet sister sees it all happening but understands very little. Narrator Sara Young does a fantastic job of riding the novel's twists and turns. Her voices are distinct, adding layers of texture when they are in use. However, without vocal changes, listeners may struggle to keep track of the speaker when it comes to interior dialogue, as the writing doesn't always have explicit identifiers. VERDICT Listeners seeking atmosphere and tension will speed through, while those who like closure may be less satisfied.—Natalie Marshall

APRIL 2022 - AudioFile

O’Nan’s literary mystery opens with eighth-grader Marie calmly stating that her sister, Angel, a senior, helped murder a girl. Narrator Sara Young is most nuanced when Marie speaks as an astute observer of the people and dynamics of her working-class Rhode Island town. Young brings Angel; Myles, the cheating boyfriend; and Birdy, the hapless victim, to life through unique teenage voices that illuminate their personalities. Less successful are the chapters told in a third-person omniscient voice, which Young delivers in a detached tone. In these sections of this small-town drama, inconsistent or nonexistent vocal nuances make it difficult to identify important secondary characters as their lives are impacted for years to come by the tragedy. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 01/17/2022

There’s no mystery about what happens in this beautifully rendered and heartbreaking story from O’Nan (West of Sunset). In the opening pages, teenager Angel Oliviera murders another teen, Birdy Alves. O’Nan explores what led up to the killing and paints an intimate canvas of a small Rhode Island town in 2009. Women, teenage and adult, are the focal points and the narrators: Angel’s observant younger sister, Marie, sets the stage, and Birdy, Angel, and Angel’s mother, Carol, tell the story through a series of flashbacks and internal monologues. Birdy is dating Hector, but she’s in a clandestine relationship with Angel’s boyfriend. Angel frets about her mother’s desperate attempts to find love. Carol wants a better life for her daughters, but senses it’s “beyond her control” (the 2009 setting underscores the economic fragility). Social media serves as the ugly catalyst for the action that slowly, inexorably escalates. O’Nan evokes the feverish excitement of young love (“She only means to kiss him goodbye but they don’t know how to stop”) and the truly destructive force of jealousy. This isn’t a crime novel; it’s a Shakespearean tragedy told in spare, poetic, insightful prose. Agent: David Gernert, Gernert Co. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Ocean State:

“Interesting and enduring…O’Nan is an enticing writer, a master of the illuminatingly mundane moments…In Ocean State, O’Nan is subverting the thriller, borrowing its momentum to propel this bracing, chilling novel. Whereas thrillers tend to use murders as a prurient jumping-off point, the entryway to the reader’s pleasure — that chance to play Columbo or Kinsey Millhone in our heads — O’Nan takes his time, humanizing this story to make the hole where the victim was suitably substantial. Highly specific to the landmarks of the real Ashaway, but ringing with the universal, Ocean State is a map for the emotional dead ends of America, where kids kill other kids over seemingly nothing. O’Nan understands that at least in the moment, it is for everything.”—New York Times

“O’Nan’s great gift is that we want to know more about every person he writes, no matter how unremarkable they seem from the outside . . . Through prolonged exposure to the girls’ thoughts, O’Nan builds the novel’s tension until it feels like the air right before a monsoon; these teens, like all of us, are ruled by their passions, and passions can and do transcend human law . . . The entire telling becomes an act of empathy. It’s an invention, but one that drives home irrevocably and elegantly what you’d been feeling as you read but did not fully acknowledge: that there are as many different kinds of pain as there are people.”—Boston Globe

“Even as he inverts the form, veteran novelist Stewart O’Nan effectively keeps you turning the pages quickly with this tragic story of teenage love…it should be mentioned that the sections of the story narrated by the murder victim, Birdy, gather an almost excruciating tension as she approaches her inevitable fate. O’Nan makes her much more than a simple plot device, and it's what elevates the story to more than just a page-turner.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune

Ocean State is a haunting immersion into the desperate and immediate world of adolescence gone wrong, where emotional certainty dictates that actions be taken before rational minds can pull back. The result is a gripping march to the inevitable, presented through the close perspective of four women whose lives will soon be forever changed… In addition to granting us close proximity to each character’s movements, O’Nan deftly provides a larger collage of the enormity that unfolds, leaving us with reflection of the tenuousness of life, the wish that this tragedy could have been avoided, and the privilege of having been witness to its progression.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“The events are horrifying, and not only in terms of that final violence, the writing is lovely, glimmering. O’Nan evokes Ocean State's setting, the blue-collar Rhode Island town of Ashaway, with equal care: perhaps unbeautiful, but rendered with detail and tenderness. O’Nan’s greatest accomplishment is in the compassionate portrayal of characters who are each guilty of smaller and larger wrongs, but whose motivations, concerns and battles always feel of real concern…Ocean State is a compelling, propulsive read: easy to inhale but difficult in some ways to stomach. This is a story less about love than about obsession and family connections and disconnections, and about the devastations of hardscrabble lives. The ugly turns beautiful in O’Nan’s scintillating prose, and his four main characters will linger with readers long after their stories end.”—Shelf Awareness

“[A] beautifully rendered and heartbreaking story…This isn’t a crime novel; it’s a Shakespearean tragedy told in spare, poetic, insightful prose.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review

“The latest from O'Nan begins with the shocking and tragic end of a teen love triangle…O'Nan's detailed, sympathetic portrayal of his characters and their community will appeal to fans of Elizabeth Strout's My Name Is Lucy Barton (2016), Olive Kitteridge (2008), and Olive, Again (2019).”—Booklist

“Prolific, protean O’Nan examines a familiar subject, hard-pressed working-class life in America, through the lens of a Rhode Island murder…the book is rich in social detail…and warmed by O’Nan’s customary tenderness for ordinary lives. Everyday People was the title of one of his first great novels, in 2001, and depicting everyday people with sensitive acuity remains one of his principal artistic achievements here…finely rendered with poignant realism.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Stewart O’Nan’s haunting and fleet Ocean State tunnels deeply into the heady, hard lives of the vivid young women at its center. Half-broken and full of longing, these women move us deeply. As the story hurtles toward an act of violence that feels both impossible and inexorable, we find ourselves wanting to stop and protect all of them.” —Megan Abbott

“From Speed Queen to The Good Wife to Emily, Alone, Stewart O’Nan has been one of the best chroniclers of the lives of American women. He writes about the single mothers, the watchful daughters, the neighborhoods where loyalty and struggle are echoed in hard work and marriages on the rocks. In Ocean State he writes once again about the women I know so well—who work as convalescent aides, in grocery stores and factories, mothers searching for one more chance at love, and daughters finding their first loves, with tragic consequences. I could not put this book down, and finished it so fast, and I keep seeing the rainy shores and abandoned mills, the three generations of women in America.” —Susan Straight

“One of Stewart O’Nan’s many gifts is a keen and unflinching eye lit with an abiding compassion for his characters, all of which is on display in his mesmerizing new novel, Ocean State. Set in the forgotten streets of post-industrial, blue collar Rhode Island, this timely and gritty tale takes us deeply into the lives of girls and women who must navigate the kind of loss that can either break or strengthen the ties that bind us all. Ocean State is a gem glittering in the darkness.” —Andre Dubus III

“Stewart O’Nan is out to break your heart in the most beautiful way. He is writing with his full power unleashed. This book is a classic.” —Luis Alberto Urrea

“In the opening paragraph Marie (who would be right at home in a Shirley Jackson novel) tells us the awful thing that’s going to happen, but of course, she doesn’t reveal the whole mesmerizing, devastating story. O’Nan has the integrity to not flinch, not even once, while expertly imbuing his characters with empathy, insight and authenticity. A uniquely 21st Century American tragedy, Ocean State wraps its hand around your heart and squeezes.” —Paul Tremblay

“What O’Nan has done perhaps better than anybody else the past ten years is deliver the complexity, heartbreak and human drama of everyday people living everyday lives.” —Jonathan Evison

Praise for Stewart O’Nan:

“Stewart O’Nan loves us and forgives us and watches us when we aren’t looking.” —Amy Bloom

“Our contemporary master Stewart O’Nan—the king of the quotidian.” —Elizabeth Strout

“I love all of his books—all of them.” —Terry McMillan

“O’Nan is an incredibly versatile and charming writer.” —George Saunders

“If you haven’t read Stewart O’Nan, you have some catching up to do.” —Stephen King

“[O’Nan’s] finest and deepest novel to date . . . The action rises and ebbs with the rhythms of daily life—meals, swimming, after-dinner videos, the children’s bedtime. . .. The general absence of melodrama allows O’Nan to focus on the characters, and he draws them with sympathy and subtlety, especially the women.” —New York Times Book Review, on Wish You Were Here

“Stark and brilliantly mesmerizing . . . You read on less to find out what happens to the Maxwells than to become better acquainted with the characters, whom O’Nan makes fascinating and familiar. Here are ‘our real lives.’” —Los Angeles Times, on Wish You Were Here

“O’Nan reveals how close a good and caring family can sit by disaster with disaster nevertheless held in abeyance.” —Baltimore Sun, on Wish You Were Here

“Riveting. . .. O’Nan has written the perfect summer-by-the-lake read. . .. This is the landscape of family Jonathan Franzen illuminates in The Corrections, or Jane Smiley in Ordinary Love.” —Chicago Tribune, on Wish You Were Here

“Filled with the type of life lessons that the best fiction has to offer. . .. [O’Nan] conveys this through a sprawling, generously written saga that imparts exceptional insights into the human heart.” —Charlotte Observer, on Wish You Were Here

“The tableau of daily life is expertly painted, and O’Nan takes time with his story, drawing the reader into a world created with unwavering confidence. . .. For this author of seemingly limitless scope, perhaps this novel will prove to be O’Nan’s ‘breakout book.’” —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, on Wish You Were Here

“It’s hard not to admire O’Nan’s earnestness and his compassion for his characters.” —San Francisco Chronicle, on Wish You Were Here

“Beautifully spare and poignant . . . a novel that charms not through its plot, but through its subtle revelations of character and the human condition.” —New York Times Book Review, on Henry, Himself

“Stewart O’Nan excels at portraying the dilemmas and desires of ordinary people . . . A wise, tender and humorous writer, he portrays outwardly unexceptional people with rich inner lives defined by doubt and anxiety, affection and hope. Henry, Himself is a beautiful book with a touch of the ineffable about it, and the best novel I have read so far this year.” —Seattle Times, on Henry, Himself

“O’Nan, with some of his most gorgeous writing, [provides] Henry instances of unexpected grace . . . This novel is a lovely tribute to the enduring mystery of an ordinary life.” —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, on Henry, Himself

“O’Nan has returned to the mode that marks his best work, capturing America’s shaky middle class with dignity . . . Tracking Henry’s subtle interplay with [his wife] Emily, and the unspoken mysteries that concern him, O’Nan reveals a rich inner life.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune, on Henry, Himself

“O'Nan’s best novel yet . . . It’s heartbreaking stuff—I will confess I found myself sobbing at certain, often unexpected points . . . and yet the novel’s brilliance lies just as much with O’Nan’s innate comic timing.” —New York Times Book Review, on Emily, Alone

“Emily is as authentic a character as any who ever walked the pages of a novel . . . filled with joy and rue . . . an ordinary life made, by its quiet rendering, extraordinary.” —Boston Globe, on Emily, Alone

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“A haunting immersion into the desperate and immediate world of adolescence gone wrong, where emotional certainty dictates that actions be taken before rational minds can pull back.”

New York Times Book Review

“[It] appears to be a fast-paced thriller set in coastal Rhode Island. O’Nan instead takes his time, building a bracing, chilling novel about class, desperation and young love.”

Library Journal

04/09/2022

The latest by prolific novelist O'Nan (Emily, Alone) starts with a murder. From the first sentence, readers know who was murdered and by whom; the rest of the book builds up to the murder, tracing the lives, actions, and feelings of the murderer, 18-year-old Angel; her mother Carol; her victim, Birdie, also 18; and Angel's younger sister Marie, who observes the tragedy as it unfolds and then looks back on it years later. By then, everyone has patched together their torn-apart lives but none of them is ever the same. The novel is about a killing, but it's not violence or the catching of the killers—Angel and her boyfriend—that is its center. Rather, it's about blue-collar life in Rhode Island, and the slights and insecurities that come along with it. And here we are on familiar territory for the novelist, who's one of the premier chroniclers of the everyday lives, joys, and regrets of ordinary working-class people. VERDICT Readers who enjoy the fiction of Elizabeth Strout or Kent Haruf will love this book, which shows a big heart without a whiff of sentimentality.—David Keymer

APRIL 2022 - AudioFile

O’Nan’s literary mystery opens with eighth-grader Marie calmly stating that her sister, Angel, a senior, helped murder a girl. Narrator Sara Young is most nuanced when Marie speaks as an astute observer of the people and dynamics of her working-class Rhode Island town. Young brings Angel; Myles, the cheating boyfriend; and Birdy, the hapless victim, to life through unique teenage voices that illuminate their personalities. Less successful are the chapters told in a third-person omniscient voice, which Young delivers in a detached tone. In these sections of this small-town drama, inconsistent or nonexistent vocal nuances make it difficult to identify important secondary characters as their lives are impacted for years to come by the tragedy. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2021-12-15
Prolific, protean O’Nan examines a familiar subject, hard-pressed working-class life in America, through the lens of a Rhode Island murder.

Ashaway, Rhode Island, in 2009 is a typical postindustrial town; the mill that employed most of its residents is closed, leaving people like Carol to scrabble for a living as a nurse’s aide to support her two teenage daughters. One of them, Marie, opens the novel with these words: “When I was in eighth grade my sister helped kill another girl.” This is not a whodunit but an exploration of why the murder happened; O’Nan tells the story with his characteristic compassion (and artistic boldness) by inhabiting the consciousnesses of four unhappy, conflicted females. Overweight, unpopular Marie is the fearful, helpless observer. Carol wants more for her girls than she has, “but exactly how that will happen she can’t imagine”—so she focuses instead on finding a new boyfriend who’s better than the parade of losers who have earned her eldest daughter Angel’s contempt. Angel can’t see any way out either; her post-graduation future promises little beyond continuing to work in her dead-end after-school job while privileged boyfriend Myles heads for college and “she’ll lose him to some rich girl.” Actually, Myles is already cheating on her with Birdy, the victim-to-be, whose lovestruck perspective is the fourth narrative strand. But she’s no rich girl; Birdy and Angel are more alike than different, frustrated and obsessing about a boy who doesn’t seem worth it. Seen only through others’ eyes, Myles’ role in the ensuing tragedy remains murky. The novel’s main thrust is also unclear; Marie’s closing monologue suggests themes of memory and identity that weren’t particularly evident as the story progressed. However, the book is rich in social detail, including the teenagers’ socially networked world, and warmed by O’Nan’s customary tenderness for ordinary lives. Everyday People was the title of one of his first great novels, in 2001, and depicting everyday people with sensitive acuity remains one of his principal artistic achievements here.

Not one of this gifted author’s best, though it’s finely rendered with poignant realism.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176109122
Publisher: Dreamscape Media
Publication date: 03/15/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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