Empire Falls
Empire Falls book cover

Empire Falls

Price
$18.93
Format
Paperback
Pages
496
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307275134
Dimensions
5.25 x 1.25 x 8 inches
Weight
12.2 ounces

Description

“Rich, humorous, elegantly constructed . . . Easily Mr. Russo’s most seductive book thus far.”– The New York Times “Russo writes with a warm, vibrant humanity.... A stirring mix of poignancy, drama and comedy.” —The Washington Post “Russo is one of the best novelists around.” – The New York Times Book Review “The history of American literature may show that Richard Russo wrote the last great novel of the 20th century.” – Christian Science Monitor “Nobody does small-town life better than Richard Russo.” –Atlanta Journal-Constitution Richard Russo lives in coastal Maine with his wife and their two daughters. He has written five novels: Mohawk , The Risk Pool , Nobody’s Fool , Straight Man and Empire Falls , and a collection of short stories, The Whore's Child . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PROLOGUECompared to the Whiting mansion in town, the house Charles Beaumont Whiting built a decade after his return to Maine was modest. By every other standard of Empire Falls, where most single-family homes cost well under seventy-five thousand dollars, his was palatial, with five bedrooms, five full baths, and a detached artist's studio. C. B. Whiting had spent several formative years in old Mexico, and the house he built, appearances be damned, was a mission-style hacienda. He even had the bricks specially textured and painted tan to resemble adobe. A damn-fool house to build in central Maine, people said, though they didn't say it to him.Like all Whiting males, C.B. was a short man who disliked drawing attention to the fact, so the low-slung Spanish architecture suited him to a T. The furniture was of the sort used in model homes and trailers to give the impression of spaciousness; this optical illusion worked well enough except on those occasions when large people came to visit, and then the effect was that of a lavish dollhouse.The hacienda--as C. B. Whiting always referred to it--was built on a tract of land the family had owned for several generations. The first Whitings of Dexter County had been in the logging business, and they'd gradually acquired most of the land on both sides of the Knox River so they could keep an eye on what floated by on its way to the ocean, some fifty miles to the southeast. By the time C. B. Whiting was born, Maine had been wired for electricity, and the river, dammed below Empire Falls at Fairhaven, had lost much of its primal significance. The forestry industry had moved farther north and west, and the Whiting family had branched out into textiles and paper and clothing manufacture.Though the river was no longer required for power, part of C. B. Whiting's birthright was a vestigial belief that it was his duty to keep his eye on it, so when the time came to build his house, he selected a site just above the falls and across the Iron Bridge from Empire Falls, then a thriving community of men and women employed in the various mills and factories of the Whiting empire. Once the land was cleared and his house built, C.B. would be able to see his shirt factory and his textile mill through the trees in winter, which, in mid-Maine, was most of the year. His paper mill was located a couple miles upstream, but its large smokestack billowed plumes of smoke, sometimes white and sometimes black, that he could see from his back patio.By moving across the river, C. B. Whiting became the first of his clan to acknowledge the virtue of establishing a distance from the people who generated their wealth. The family mansion in Empire Falls, a huge Georgian affair, built early in the previous century, offered fieldstone fireplaces in every bedroom and a formal dining room whose oak table could accommodate upwards of thirty guests beneath half a dozen glittering chandeliers that had been transported by rail from Boston. It was a house built to inspire both awe and loyalty among the Irish, Polish and Italian immigrants who came north from Boston, and among the French Canadians, who came south, all of them in search of work. The old Whiting mansion was located right in the center of town, one block from the shirt factory and two from the textile mill, built there on purpose, if you could believe it, by Whiting men who worked fourteen-hour days, walked home for their noon meal and then returned to the factory, often staying far into the night.As a boy, C.B. had enjoyed living in the Whiting mansion. His mother complained constantly that it was old, drafty and inconvenient to the country club, to the lake house, to the highway that led south to Boston, where she preferred to shop. But with its extensive, shady grounds and its numerous oddly shaped rooms, it was a fine place to grow up in. His father, Honus Whiting, loved the place too, especially that only Whitings had ever lived there. Honus's own father, Elijah Whiting, then in his late eighties, still lived in the carriage house out back with his ill-tempered wife. Whiting men had a lot in common, including the fact that they invariably married women who made their lives a misery. C.B.'s father had fared better in this respect than most of his forebears, but still resented his wife for her low opinion of himself, of the Whiting mansion, of Empire Falls, of the entire backward state of Maine, to which she felt herself cruelly exiled from Boston. The lovely wrought iron gates and fencing that had been brought all the way from New York to mark the perimeter of the estate were to her the walls of her prison, and every time she observed this, Honus reminded her that he held the key to those gates and would let her out at any time. If she wanted to go back to Boston so damn bad, she should just do it. He said this knowing full well she wouldn't, for it was the particular curse of the Whiting men that their wives remained loyal to them out of spite.By the time their son was born, though, Honus Whiting was beginning to understand and privately share his wife's opinion, as least as it pertained to Empire Falls. As the town mushroomed during the last half of the nineteenth century, the Whiting estate gradually was surrounded by the homes of mill workers, and of late the attitude of the people doing the surrounding seemed increasingly resentful. The Whitings had traditionally attempted to appease their employees each summer by throwing gala socials on the family grounds, but it seemed to Honus Whiting that many of the people who attended these events anymore were singularly ungrateful for the free food and drink and music, some of them regarding the mansion itself with hooded expressions that suggested their hearts wouldn't be broken if it burned to the ground.Perhaps because of this unspoken but growing animosity, C. B. Whiting had been sent away, first to prep school, then to college. Afterward he'd spent the better part of a decade traveling, first with his mother in Europe (which was much more to that good woman's liking than Maine) and then later on his own in Mexico (which was much more to his liking than Europe, where there'd been too much to learn and appreciate). While many European men towered over him, those in Mexico were shorter, and C. B. Whiting especially admired that they were dreamers who felt no urgency about bringing their dreams to fruition. But his father, who was paying for his son's globe-trotting, finally decided his heir should return home and start contributing to the family fortune instead of squandering as much as he could south of the border. Charles Beaumont Whiting was by then in his late twenties, and his father was coming to the reluctant conclusion that his only real talent was for spending money, though the young man claimed to be painting and writing poetry as well. Time to put an end to both, at least in the old man's view. Honus Whiting was fast approaching his sixtieth birthday, and though glad he'd been able to indulge his son, he now realized he'd let it go on too long and that the boy's education in the family businesses he would one day inherit was long overdue. Honus himself had begun in the shirt factory, then moved over to the textile mill, and finally, when old Elijah had lost his mind one day and tried to kill his wife with a shovel, took over the paper mill upriver. Honus wanted his son to be prepared for the inevitable day when he, too, would lose his marbles and assault Charles's mother with whatever weapon came to hand. Europe had not improved her opinion of himself, of Empire Falls or of Maine, as he had hoped it might. In his experience people were seldom happier for having learned what they were missing, and all Europe had done for his wife was encourage her natural inclination toward bitter and invidious comparison.For his part, Charles Beaumont Whiting, sent away from home as a boy when he would've preferred to stay, now had no more desire to return from Mexico than his mother had to return from Europe, but when summoned he sighed and did as he was told, much as he always had done. It wasn't as if he hadn't known that the end of his youth would arrive, taking with it his travels, his painting and his poetry. There was never any question that Whiting and Sons Enterprises would one day devolve to him, and while it occurred to him that returning to Empire Falls and taking over the family businesses might be a violation of his personal destiny as an artist, there didn't seem to be any help for it. One day, when he sensed the summons growing near, he tried to put down in words what he felt to be his own best nature and how wrong it would be to thwart his true calling. His idea was to share these thoughts with his father, but what he'd written sounded a lot like his poetry, vague and unconvincing even to him, and he ended up throwing the letter away. For one thing he wasn't sure his father, a practical man, would concede that anybody had a nature to begin with; and if you did, it was probably your duty either to deny it or to whip it into shape, show it who was boss. During his last months of freedom in Mexico, C.B. lay on the beach and argued the point with his father in his imagination, argued it over and over, losing every time, so when the summons finally came he was too worn out to resist. He returned home determined to do his best but fearing that he'd left his real self and all that he was capable of in Mexico.What he discovered was that violating his own best nature wasn't nearly as unpleasant or difficult as he'd imagined. In fact, looking around Empire Falls, he got the distinct impression that people did it every day. And if you had to violate your destiny, doing so as a Whiting male wasn't so bad. To his surprise he also discovered that it was possible to be good at what you had little interest in, just as it had been possible to be bad at something, whether painting or poetry, that you cared about a great deal. While the shirt factory held no attraction for him, he demonstrated something like an aptitude for running it, for understanding the underl... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • With
  • Empire Falls
  • Richard Russo cements his reputation as one of America’s most compelling and compassionate storytellers. Miles Roby has been slinging burgers at the Empire Grill for 20 years, a job that cost him his college education and much of his self-respect. What keeps him there? It could be his bright, sensitive daughter Tick, who needs all his help surviving the local high school. Or maybe it’s Janine, Miles’ soon-to-be ex-wife, who’s taken up with a noxiously vain health-club proprietor. Or perhaps it’s the imperious Francine Whiting, who owns everything in town–and seems to believe that “everything” includes Miles himself. In
  • Empire Falls
  • Richard Russo delves deep into the blue-collar heart of America in a work that overflows with hilarity, heartache, and grace.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(937)
★★★★
25%
(781)
★★★
15%
(468)
★★
7%
(219)
23%
(718)

Most Helpful Reviews

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One of the Best Books I have ever read!

A wonderfully complex tapestry of character development, Empire Falls appears to move slowly toward its emotionally draining climax. But you find that you don't want it to move any faster -- you savor the moments as you get to know each of the characters and their depressing lives as well as the town of Empire Falls. The protaganist, Miles Roby, is such a good, decent, upright, tragically flawed human being that you actually feel his hurts and disappointments and realize how he was (but is no longer) capable of so much more in life.

Without a doubt this was one of the best books I have ever read. It was also my first Richard Russo novel. After reading Empire Falls, this summer became the "Summer of Russo." By far, Empire Falls is simply his best. None of the other novels even come close in terms of texture and story development -- not that they are bad reads, they are just not Empire Falls. Buy it, read it. You will not be sorry.
11 people found this helpful
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Great talent, poor execution

Mr. Russo has a great sense of character development. That's really the highlight of this book, Russo's dialog and and characters. Russo does a wonderful job of creating a town full of very realistic characters, woven into a tangible fabric and completely avoids the pitfalls of either the use of archetypes, or the use of overly absurd characters who are often interesting, but far from realistic. What's more, he succeeds in creating interesting characters out of very regular people and by the end the reader definitely gets a sense that they know these people pretty well. The book certainly should not have won the Pulitzer however. The problem comes with the plot. Normally I can push a plot aside and hardly care if anything happens at all, provided a nice bit of character development or perhaps a decent allegory is provided, but in Empire Falls, I was constantly distracted and annoyed with an overly predictable , soap opera-esque, and ultimately amateurish plot. Russo's careful character building actually suffers as we see these very interesting characters plunged into a banal plot with pointless and completely expected twists. Bu the end of the novel, Russo's carefully constructed characters are damaged to the point of being little more than Days of our Lives characters. What's more, the twists are often either of the 'ripped from the headlines' variety, or from some other equally retold story; which serves to break the usual enthrallment and escapism found in all good novels and ultimately push the reader away. I always finish a book once I've started it, even if it's absolutely dreadful as I feel I owe it to the author who took the time to pour himself into such a long task. This one got kind of tough to trudge through towards the last 3rd. Very disappointing, especially when you notice all the talent the author obviously has.

Cheers,
John
7 people found this helpful
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horrible... dont bother

the thinly veiled misogyny that runs through this book was enough to make me put it down in disgust. if mrs russo really does read her husband's manuscripts, as he claims in his acknowledgements, she ought to be doing a better job at pointing out how much he obviously doesn't like women. i couldn't get past page 50 but i had to because it was a book club selection. it appalls me that educated women would read this book at all... let alone enjoy it and recommend it to anyone else.
4 people found this helpful
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Pulitzer Prize?

I can't figure out why this one the Pulitzer, unless it was a dry year for novels. I felt a steady, low-level of enjoyment throughout this book. I didn't find the characters compelling or the story particularly engaging. I liked the book enough to finish it but wouldn't recommend it to anyone.
3 people found this helpful
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One of my all time favorites

I grew up in a small town that was run by a few big families who gradually moved away with the industry. This book nails it.

The book is long, but well worth every word that is written. Richard Russo is an amazing writer. The characters are so well developed you either know them or are them.

The story line is fascinating- you think it's going one way and is about something, then it adds on, twists, ebbs back--

I truly think this book is going to be a classic that is read in about 50 years to discuss how life was "way back then."
3 people found this helpful
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Will the real Maine please step forward

What is it about Maine that seems to call to the imaginations of fiction writers? It is a backdrop for many of Steven King's novels and short stories. John Irving's characters often inhabit that far northern state. Anne Proulx's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, "The Shipping News" uses Maine as both a backdrop and as a state of mind. Thoreau wrote about it, as did E.B. White. One of my old college professors, Sam Pickering, has written dozens of essays about his wife's summerhouse in Maine. I have always been curious why Maine seemed so under populated and over represented in the world of literature.

In my family, Maine is looked upon in the same way that I imagine early 20th century immigrants viewed the old country--a nice enough place with plenty of stories, but by-god there's a reason why we left! And I suspect that it is exactly that old-country status, that beauty coupled with bad soil and harsh winters, the boom and bust timber industry, textile industry, and blossoming tourist industry, that calls to the imagination of writers and makes books about Maine marketable.

But of course, no book is marketable unless it is well written... On second thought, let me amend that--books about Maine are less marketable if they are not well written. I suspect that serious writers tend toward interesting and unforgiving landscapes. I believe that there is a gravity about Maine, a seriousness that stays when all the summer tourists have gone home, the sort of seriousness that good writers like to have in their books.

But writing about Maine can also be dangerous. In Anne Proux's novel I found the Maine my grandmother and great-grandfather told me about, a place where mothers and fathers, brothers, sisters and children were buried unforgiven, a place with secrets that even I, two generations removed, know but can't recall ever being told. And that's where things for me can get messy. As I read Richard Russo's "Empire Falls," I could not help but wonder if the town should have been placed in another state, a state where drunks are basically kind, where Catholic priests are progressive, and where all the children are above average.

To summarize the novel: small town protagonist, Miles Roby, drops out of college his senior year to return home to his sick mother. He stays, never finishing college, to work at the Empire Grill. His mother has died after spending the last twenty years of her life working for the local wealthy family. Miles slowly discovers that his long dead mother had an affair with the hopelessly lost and romantic patriarch of the wealthy family. This affair explains why the matriarch seeks for to keep Miles bound and locked into the failing diner and his lackluster small town life. It was his mother's last wish that Miles leave Empire Falls. By causing him to stay, the matriarch is exacting her daily revenge through the son of her long dead rival.

Along the way the patriarch commits suicide. The suicide comes years after he runs over his only legitimate daughter, thereby causing her to live the rest of her life as "a cripple." There is also a school shooting, a gay priest, a boy who beats dogs and throws his grandmother's corpse in the town dump, and a newspaper reporter who believes his best ideas come from a vein-filled, purple growth on his forehead.

On the surface of things this novel seems to be quintessential Maine. But I struggled from prologue to epilogue with Russo's characterization of blue-collar Maine. Even though his characters are interesting enough, they move through their lives with far to much ease and acceptance. There is a cleanliness, a clarity to their existence that the narrator reveals to us quickly and we know that it is only a matter of time before they either realize their true place in the world or get their comeuppance.

And I suppose there is nothing wrong with this in a novel. Stories need resolution and characters need to stay on track. Russo is a recognized and accomplished novelist--"Empire Falls" won him the Pulitzer Prize after all. But as I read the book I kept questioning the voice of the narrator, a wise and witty omniscient voice that sounded too much like my literature professors and too little like the working men and women I grew up with. And maybe that's my beef. The voice did not match the story. And time and again I felt as though the narrator was toying with me, intentionally withholding information that I might be compelled to read on to the next chapter.

I think of Steinbeck's novels and how easily his omniscient voice matched his material without ever lowering itself or otherwise forcing the point. And that brings me back to Maine and perhaps my own lack of imagination and distance from the place. I do not think of it as a modern place full of wit and clarity. The Maine of my imagination is a land of old stories, of things just as often left unsaid as said. And "Empire Falls" shares this particular sense of Yankee privacy and lays out the old stories that are somehow passed forward without ever being told, but the voice comes from someplace else. It is a story told by an outsider who might have his facts straight, but casts doubt on his lines because I know instinctively he is not of that place and his story belongs to somebody or in someplace else. Not to suggest that a writer must rightfully own a story before s/he writes that story. But they must do so convincingly, and the narrator of "Empire Falls" sounded too much like a writer and too little like the people who inhabit the story.
3 people found this helpful
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How did this get a Pulitzer?

My book group read this and the consensus was that it's a mediocre book. The characters are pretty well developed, so if that's all you want in a book, this will be fine. But if you want plot or a book with a big idea, this isn't it. The flashbacks are engaging--probably the best segments. The rest of the writing is okay, but not great. Russo repeats things over and over, as if he thinks you've forgotten what he wrote a couple of chapters back. The heavy handedness is particularly tedious when it comes to key plot points. It wouldn't be so bad, except that the book is long and could use a good edit. And the way he ends feels totally false and soap opera-ish, like, okay, time to end the book. Everyone was shocked that he got a Pulitzer for this. Maybe it felt right when he wrote it, but in that case it hasn't aged well.

Overall, it was like watching a TV miniseries.
2 people found this helpful
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Excellent

This warm book is carefully plotted and even more carefully written but manages to be, above all, conversational and intelligent. Russo is a patient literalist who deftly squeezes a very big story and very human characters into just several hundred pages. I'm eager to read more from this fine author.
1 people found this helpful
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Russo deserves his Pulitzer for this outstanding novel!

Russo's writing style is realistic. The characters are complex. There's no "good guy" or "bad guy". He does such a nice job describing this Maine town and its people that while I was reading this book I felt like I was living in the town.

Like many realistic authors, Russo does take a Hollywood turn towards the end (to make the story more exciting I suppose). Perhaps a bit far fetched but still plausible ending. If you enjoy this style of writing I also recommend the following authors/novels:

Anything by Ian McEwan
House of Sand and Fog
Snow Falling on Cedars

Overall, I highly recommend this great work of fiction.
1 people found this helpful
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Depressing as hell

I bought the book and forced myself to finish it because of the review. Really, if it were by my choice, I would not have read the book. It is (as you will find out, by this author) all about an abandoned American town which (if you were like me, a Hopper's fan, you would understand it) is a classic example of decline of a suburb. It is an economical as well as a cultural decline (if there was any economics or culture). I am not here to compare... We all have a choice as to what to read. For me, it is like an expired strip mall. When you drive by, you get a nostalgia feeling... inevitable, helpless and depressing. The novel is well written but the scene is like my impression, so hopeless that youth people are escaping from it. This kind of art is necessary but not entirely uplifting.
1 people found this helpful