Best Books of the Year 2023 [Amazon]
Nominee for Best Fiction (2023)
Book Blurb:
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER A REESE’S BOOK CLUB PICK READ BY MERYL STREEP
In the spring of 2020, Lara’s three daughters return to the family’s orchard in Northern Michigan. While picking cherries, they beg their mother to tell them the story of Peter Duke, a famous actor with whom she shared both a stage and a romance years before at a theater company called Tom Lake. As Lara recalls the past, her daughters examine their own lives and relationship with their mother, and are forced to reconsider the world and everything they thought they knew.
Tom Lake is a meditation on youthful love, married love, and the lives parents have led before their children were born. Both hopeful and elegiac, it explores what it means to be happy even when the world is falling apart. As in all of her novels, Ann Patchett combines compelling narrative artistry with piercing insights into family dynamics. The result is a rich and luminous story, told with profound intelligence and emotional subtlety, that demonstrates once again why she is one of the most revered and acclaimed literary talents working today.
My Review:
Again with the coming of age, family life fiction, I sank into the Tom Lake audiobook in no small part because of the author—listened to The Dutch House and loved it—but also because Meryl Streep narrates this one. Can you get any better than that? Yeah, The Dutch House is narrated by Tom Hanks. Patchett can warrant a highly celebrated actor to narrate her literary fiction.
Streep is perfect for this part and, indeed, she plays it like an acting part, using that memorable voice to set the tone, the scene, and the characters beautifully. It’s much like having her in your living room and telling the story to you as if it were her own. But it’s Lara’s story, whose three daughters return to northern Michigan during the pandemic with cherry picking looming over the farm in the summer…Good Lord Willing and the Creek Don’t Rise.
It is a down home look back on Lara’s life which as a young woman revolves around the theater and the actors, support staff who present the plays—now a local theater company called Tom Lake preparing for the play Our Town. But heaven knows she had some history and though the girls have all heard stories of those years, the one they keep reverting to is their mother’s romance with Peter Duke. He went on to become a big star.
Particularly with an audiobook that switches time frames, seems like sometimes in the same paragraph, you can lose the train of thought and have to work to catch up. Even Streep can get into quiet reflection mode and slow the progression of the storyline somewhat. There are a lot of support characters, so the reader is forced to remember where in the narrative it was prior to being buried in minutia.
Patchett manages to leave little pearls of discovery that eventually become a jewel of the tale. Along the way, there have been little surprises, twists, but ones generally expected. So what are we leading up to? Could she have taken the left at the fork and gone on to stardom herself? Could she have pursued Duke and become the shadow behind him? Why did she marry Joe and face a life on a Michigan cherry farm?
Descriptions have the farm and the area sounding so lovely, the reader might crave the beauty and peace of the life (unless you also gave thought to Michigan winters). There is a lot about theater here, the secrets behind the curtain, family secrets (some of which Lara coyly retains), and well-developed characters including the family rescue dog—throw in the grandma for good measure.
Yes, I greatly enjoyed Streep’s interpretation of the novel and the writing style but found the pace was a bit slow.
I downloaded a copy of this audiobook from my local well-stocked library. These are my honest thoughts.
Rosepoint Publishing: Four Stars 
Book Details:
Genre: Coming of Age Fiction, Family life Fiction
Publisher: HarperAudio
ASIN: B0BPZYH97W
Listening Length: 11 hrs 22 mins
Narrator: Meryl Streep
Publication Date: August 1, 2023Source: Local Library (Audiobook Selections)
Title Link: Tom Lake [Amazon]
The Author: Ann Patchett is the author of six novels, including Bel Canto, which won the Orange Prize for Fiction. She writes for the New York Times Magazine, Elle, GQ, the Financial Times, the Paris Review and Vogue. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee. (Amazon)
Patchett was born in Los Angeles, California. Her mother is the novelist Jeanne Ray.
She moved to Nashville, Tennessee when she was six, where she continues to live. Patchett said she loves her home in Nashville with her doctor husband and dog. If asked if she could go any place, that place would always be home. “Home is …the stable window that opens out into the imagination.”
Patchett attended high school at St. Bernard Academy, a private, non-parochial Catholic school for girls run by the Sisters of Mercy. Following graduation, she attended Sarah Lawrence College and took fiction writing classes with Allan Gurganus, Russell Banks, and Grace Paley. She later attended the Iowa Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where she met longtime friend Elizabeth McCracken. It was also there that she wrote her first novel, The Patron Saint of Liars.
In 2010, when she found that her hometown of Nashville no longer had a good book store, she co-founded Parnassus Books with Karen Hayes; the store opened in November 2011. In 2012, Patchett was on the Time 100 list of most influential people in the world by TIME magazine. (Goodreads)
©2024 V Williams





Great review, Virginia. I have been on the fence with this one, especially because of the pacing. I found a lot of The Dutch House, really slow, although I did enjoy it overall. Your review is excellent and I may just take the plunge. I know my library has the audiobook, so whenever I’m ready, I will request it.
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Thank you, Carla. Guess I enjoyed The Dutch House more because of Tom Hanks. Streep does okay, but does tend to go la la la sometimes. You might want to set the audiobook speed to 125.
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Thanks, Virginia. I will get it from the library, so if it doesn’t work for me, not big deal to DNF.
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HA! yes, I’m always grateful for that no commitment out myself.
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