I have not read Ann Patchett for a long time. In fact, I’ve only read one novel, Bel Canto, way before blogging, and one nonfiction piece, “The bookshop strikes back” (my review). So, when I saw all the love her latest novel, Tom Lake, was getting in 2023’s end-of-year lists (including Kate‘s annual compilation), I thought it might be time to read her again, and added it my reading group’s suggestions list. With others having read and enjoyed various of her books, we reached consensus and scheduled it for March.
For those who haven’t caught up with it, Tom Lake is set on a family cherry orchard in Michigan during the COVID pandemic. It is a dual timeline story in which the narrator, 57-year-old Lara, tells her three twenty-something daughters, about her past, specifically about the summer she played Emily in Thornton Wilder’s classic play, Our town, and the romance she had with Duke, a co-actor who later became a huge star. Lara was just 24-years-old, and these were the golden days of youth when all seemed possible. As we flip between past and present, while the family picks the sweet cherries and the tart, feelings are explored and insights about life, love, and the decisions we make are revealed and turned over. The girls come to know their parents better, and see perhaps why fame is not necessarily all it appears, while Lara gets the monkey of her past off her back. This does not mean Tom Lake is one of those angsty books about the past coming back to haunt you. It’s a quieter, more subtle story about children’s fascination with their parents’ pasts, and what parents choose to tell – and when. It is also about the way in which revisiting the past can bring new insights (just as re-reading a great novel can produce new thoughts and ideas). Lara thinks, near the end:
“The beauty and the suffering are equally true. Our Town taught me that. I had memorized the lessons before I understood what they meant.” (Ch. 18)
All this would normally appeal to me, and I did enjoy reading the novel. I was fascinated by the whole summer stock theatre business because it has frequently popped up in my reading and viewing over the years. And, I loved her characterisation. The differentiation of the three sisters – Emily, Maisie and Nell – and Lara’s understanding of their separate personalities was well done and engaged me from the start.
This is not surprising. Tom Lake is Patchett’s 9th novel, so she knows how to construct and tell a story. Her metier seems to be interpersonal relationships within small groups of people. This novel’s focus is two such groups – the Tom Lake theatre group in 1988 and the family on the farm in 2020. These groups are well characterised. You feel you are there rehearsing in the theatre or swimming in the lake, or at the farm chatting over dinner or picking cherries. The voyeur in me loves being in places outside my experience, so I loved these beautifully depicted places.
But, it is a quiet novel and, as much as I enjoyed the read, I also found it somewhat unsatisfying. It’s not that it was completely predictable because, although we know from the start where Lara ended up, the journey does have some interest. It’s more that it’s a sweet, warm-hearted story, while I like a bit more edge or bite in my reading, a bit more meat.
And, there was potential for meat. Tom Lake is an intergenerational story which explores that mystery between children and their parents’ lives. It reminded me how my brother and I learnt things that surprised us about our parents’ courtship right in the last months of their lives. This story is a bit about that, about how, when and what you tell your children and why. When Lara’s husband Joe had, sometime in the past, inadvertently let drop that Lara had dated the now celebrity actor Duke, he is surprised by how much the children care. So, with the family isolated together due to the pandemic, Lara embarks on telling her story, “knowing full well that the parts they’re waiting to hear are the parts I’m never going to tell them”. This is warmly and skilfully done, so that by the end the girls accept the story they are given.
The interactions reveal other intergenerational issues too. The girls challenge Lara when she uses what is to them “politically incorrect” language. When she introduces her understudy, Pallace, who is also a dancer, Lara describes her “preposterous” legs, but is quickly criticised for “objectifying” her. And, when she describes Duke’s “craziness”, she is interrupted again and told she can’t use words like “crazy” or “nuts” or “insane”. They’re “pejorative”. She should only use his “diagnosis” and only if he didn’t mind. She should just say “what happened … Just the facts, without attaching any judgment to it”. These are gorgeous interactions that mirror the sort of conversations many of us are having as we navigate modern sensibilities. Patchett handles them with grace and generosity – not to mention a lovely touch of humour.
Indeed, one of the book’s strengths is the learning between generations, and the gentle wisdom imparted. When the girls jump onto an event involving Duke, calling it “the happiest day” in her life, Lara reminds them that it was “not by a long shot”. It was simply “the happiest day of the summer of 1988”.
So far so good … I can see why people (including me) enjoyed it. It is warm-hearted, and nicely reflective about youth and the perspectives of age. But, it also disappointed. Tom Lake crosses some genres that interest me – pandemic literature, farm literature, climate change literature (cli-fi), coming of age stories, and the sliding-door trope, and I wanted these explored more. I wanted her to tackle the questions left hanging, such as climate change and Emily’s decision not to have children.
However, Tom Lake is not that book, and I shouldn’t expect it to be, so I won’t. But, even without that, it just felt a bit saccharine (including the farm cemetery with its “benevolent” shade), a little too neatly tied up. Difficulties are hinted at, but in the end the sweet cherries win out over the tart. I, though, like my desserts just that little bit tart.
Ann Patchett
Tom Lake
London: Bloomsbury, 2023
310pp.
ISBN: 9781526664235 (eBook)























