Monday, October 11, 2021

The Lincoln Highway

My Book of the Month selection for October was The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles (the other options were The Perishing by Natasha Deon, The Ex Hex by Erin Sterling, Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead, and Everything We Didn't Say by Nicole Baart) and I absolutely loved it (almost as much as I loved his previous novel A Gentleman in Moscow which is high praise, indeed).  In 1954 Emmett Watson, age 18, has been released a few months early, in consideration of his father's death, from a work camp in Kansas where he has served 15 months for involuntary manslaughter.  He is driven home to Nebraska by the kindly warden who tells him that he has paid his debt to society and should try to live a productive life.  He learns that his father's farm has been foreclosed by the bank and decides that it would be best if he and his eight-year-old brother Billy make a fresh start in a new state.  After much research he decides that Texas would be a good option because the population is growing and he can use his carpentry skills to buy rundown houses and renovate them in order to sell them for profit.  However, his brother Billy, inspired by his copy of Professor Abacus Abernathe's Compendium of Heroes, Adventurers, and Other Intrepid Travelers, wants to go on an adventure to find their mother, who abandoned the family several years earlier.  He suspects that she is in California based on postcards sent to the boys from stops on her journey.  However, the brothers are surprised when they discover that two other inmates, Duchess and Wallace "Woolly" Wolcott Martin, went AWOL from the work camp and stowed away in the trunk of the warden's car.  They have a plan to go to New York to claim $150,000.00 left in a safe by Woolly's wealthy grandfather and offer to split the money with Emmett in exchange for a ride.  The four of them ultimately embark on an odyssey of sorts on the Lincoln Highway, the first transcontinental highway in the U.S., in Emmett's baby blue Studebaker and they have a series of adventures, and misadventures, as they attempt to settle old scores and make a future for themselves. The narrative spans ten days and is told from multiple perspectives, including a myriad of secondary characters encountered in numerous settings, each with a distinctive voice. All four protagonists are incredibly compelling, especially the wide-eyed Billy, and the storytelling, reminiscent of Steinbeck and Twain, drew me in completely.  I really enjoyed the exploration of intention in determining culpability.  The three young men take actions that seem justified given what they have experienced in their lives but, when those actions have unintended consequences, should they be held accountable?  The prose is beautiful and I savored every single word!  After falling in love with A Gentleman in Moscow during the lockdown, I had very high expectations for The Lincoln Highway and it definitely did not disappoint. I highly recommend this thought-provoking tale of friendship, self-discovery, and adventure.

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