Life has been tough for several members of the Palmer family —
vocational disability, mental illness, wayward child, broken marriage,
runaway child, almost-broken marriage, to name some of the challenges.
Angela Hallstrom in her novel "Bound on Earth" tells of three
generations' struggles to overcome trials that frequently strain, and
at times break, familial bonds.
Hallstrom is a superb writer and does an excellent job weaving the
story lines of different time periods. And if the reader ever does get
lost — as I did a couple of times after I'd had to put the book down
for a while — among the generations, there is a short genealogy guide
at the front of the book, and the chapter table of contents has a
chronology.
With so many struggles going on in one extended family, the path of
least resistance for this story line would have made it read like a
soap opera. But the author gives believable personalities to the
characters, and I never found myself tiring of their lives as they were
lived on the book's pages.
And a little nugget for anyone who has lived in the west-side Salt Lake suburbs: You'll recognize a few of the locations.
Hallstrom lives in South Jordan, with her husband and four children.
She has won awards from Irreantum magazine, Dialogue, Utah Arts Council
and the Salt Flats Annual Emerging Writer Fiction Contest.
There are a couple of mild sexual references in "Bound on Earth" —
certainly nothing more than you'd hear on typical network prime-time
television. Some readers will say, "That's reality." Others would say,
"They're gratuitous; the story could have been told just fine without
them."
I would have not given those incidents a second thought if this were
a typical mass-market book, but if a reader is expecting a "typical
LDS-market novel," these would be jarring.
If you're looking for uplifting, you will find that also. The bonds
of familial commitment — both by blood and by marriage — can be strong
enough to withstand what life throws at us.E-Mail: daves@desnews.com
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