All the Lasting Things, David Hopson
All the Lasting Things, David Hopson
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All the Lasting Things

Author: David Hopson

Narrator: Nick Podehl

Unabridged: 8 hr 37 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)

Published: 03/01/2016


Synopsis

The Fisher family of Alluvia, New York, is coming undone. Evelyn spends her days tending to her husband, Henry—an acclaimed and reclusive novelist slowly losing his battle with Alzheimer’s. Their son, Benji, onetime star of an ’80s sitcom called Prodigy, sinks deeper into drunken obscurity, railing against the bit roles he’s forced to take in uncelebrated regional theater. His sister, Claudia, tries her best to shore up her family even as she deals with the consequences of a remarkable, decades-old secret that’s come to light. When the Fishers mistake one of Benji’s drug-induced accidents for a suicidal cry for help, Benji commits to playing a role he hopes will reverse his fortune and stall his family’s decline. Into this mix comes Max Davis, a twentysomething cello virtuoso and real-life prodigy, whose appearance spurs the entire family to examine whether the secrets they thought were holding them all together may actually be what’s tearing them apart.David Hopson’s All the Lasting Things is a beautiful, moving family portrait that explores the legacy we all stand to leave—in our lives, in our work—and asks what those legacies mean in a world where all the lasting things do not last.

About David Hopson

David Hopson earned an MA in American and English literature from Washington University in St. Louis and an MFA in fiction from Columbia University. He lives in Brooklyn. All the Lasting Things is his first novel.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Nancy on February 10, 2016

I loved the first 90% of this book. The writing was good, the characters had substance, the family dynamics were very interesting and I was looking forward to a book I could read more than once. However, the last 10% was a big disappointment.......more

Goodreads review by Lynda on February 24, 2016

Dreary and Verbous Sadly, I wanted to like this book. I'm a fan of new authors and first books. It's the English teacher in me that tries to encourage the young minds in my classes to stretch and persevere. Unfortunately, this book was hard to read; overwritten and depressing. The only likable charac......more

Goodreads review by Beth on February 17, 2016

A very well-drawn picture of a dysfunctional family. All successful in their own ways but flawed and/or ill in their own ways. I wish at least one of the characters could have caught a break, but then the author could not have delivered his thoughts on the futility of life. Did not like the italiciz......more

Goodreads review by Julie on February 05, 2016

This book is beautifully written and the story of a high-functioning, but dysfunctional family is poignant and heart wrenching. I found the book difficult to concentrate on and wonder if in places the author is trying to hard to be clever. The novel is as much about the nature of fame as it is about......more

Goodreads review by Karin on July 14, 2017

This book almost brought me to tears on more than one occasion. It brings forth the complicated dimensions of family including aging parents, children, siblings, etc and captures it in a mesmerizing and thought provoking way. The characters are complex and could very well be any member of ones own f......more


Quotes

“David Hopson’s All The Lasting Things tells the story of a family ridiculously and ardently tethered together, and yet separated by a series of long-held secrets. His vibrant, radiant prose buoys the reader along almost as much as the plot’s curious twists. A captivating debut.” —Helen Schulman, This Beautiful Life“Survival is not only a necessity in this incandescent debut, it’s the poetry we create in our everyday lives—how we love, how we fail, how we try again, no matter what. This is one straight from the heart, and to the heart as well.” —Stacey D’Erasmo, author of Wonderland“David Hopson’s beautiful debut novel is a devastating examination of family, asking not so much why we keep secrets but who we keep them for. Spending time with his Fisher family will leave you in a fugue state: shattered but somehow hopeful.” —Eddie Joyce, author of Small Mercies