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|  | |  | | | The Company Car: A Novel | | | | | SKU:
ACOMMP2_book_usedverygood_0345471350 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1 business days | | Only 2 left in stock, order soon! | | | | | | An award-winning author has created his most expansive work to date–a captivating family epic, a novel that moves effortlessly from past to present on its journey to the truth of how we grow out of, away from, and into our parents.
“Are we there yet?” It’s the time-honored question of kids on a long family car trip–and Emil Czabek’s children are no exception. Yet Em asks himself the same thing as the family travels to celebrate his parents’ fiftieth wedding anniversary, and he wonders if he has escaped their wonderfully bad example.
The midwestern drive is Em’s occasion to recall the Czabek clan’s amazing odyssey, one that sprawls through the second half of the twentieth century. It begins with his parents’ wedding on the TV show It’s Your Marriage, and careens from a suburban house built sideways by a drunken contractor to a farm meant to shelter the Czabeks from a country coming apart. It is the story of Em’s father, Wally–diligent, distant, hard-drinking–and his attempts to please, protect, or simply placate his nervous, restless, and sensual wife, Susan, all in plain sight of the children they can’t seem to stop having.
As the tumultuous decades merge in his mind like the cars on the highway, Em must decide whether he should take away his parents’ autonomy and place them in the Heartland Home for the Elders. Beside him, his wife, Dorie, a woman who has run both a triathlon and for public office, makes him question what he’s inherited and whether he himself has become the responsible spouse of a drifting partner–especially since she’s packing a diaphragm and he’s had a vasectomy.
Wildly comic and wrenchingly poignant, The Company Car is a special achievement, a book that drives through territory John Irving and Jonathan Franzen have made popular to arrive at a stunning destination all its own.
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| | Product Details | | Author: | C.J. Hribal | | Paperback: | 432 pages | | Publisher: | Random House Trade Paperbacks | | Publication Date: | May 09, 2006 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0345471350 | | Product Length: | 5.22 inches | | Product Width: | 0.94 inches | | Product Height: | 7.96 inches | | Product Weight: | 0.68 pounds | | Package Length: | 7.7 inches | | Package Width: | 5.2 inches | | Package Height: | 1.0 inches | | Package Weight: | 0.65 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 8 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 8 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 5 found the following review helpful:
I recognize many of these people - but In the same family!! Mar 26, 2006
By Jeanine Kaczmarzyk
"Book Looker"
I am from WI and boy this author knows the people. It should be a movie - no, a mini series. They have them about Chicago, New York, Texas, California. This is the great Midwest, the farm country. The real stuff is in this book. A bit wordy for me at times and from a man's point of view but I surely enjoyed it. I found the very same reasons to laugh and to cry as I do with my neighbors, family, and friends.
Nearly 70 and from WI
8 of 11 found the following review helpful:
fine family drama May 26, 2005
By Harriet Klausner Emil Czabek is coming home to celebrate with his six siblings the fiftieth anniversary of their parents. As he travels to the gala, Emil thinks back over the five decades together of Wally and Susan and prays he never ends up like them though his gut tells him he is a chip off the old block.
Emil reflects on his parents' marriage on the It's Your Marriage TV show to fleeing Chicago for the suburbs and fleeing the burbs for a Wisconsin farm. He thinks of all the failed get rich schemes that dad tried between children and how he always tried to protect his family, albeit fumbling at his efforts. Emil ponders if he is as big a bungler as his father was as he considers what to do about his aging parents and contemplates whether his spouse cheats on him between her triathlon events.
The family gathering for a special event makes for a fine drama that uses internal and external perspectives to provide the audience a deep look at an extended family especially the core parents and siblings through Emil's filter. Emil is a terrific narrator who not only sheds light on his family, but his relationship with his wife as he sees things. At times the baseball size starting team can become overwhelming to keep score of especially when spouses and grandchildren come off the bench, but readers who appreciate an insightful character study that provides an interesting fifty year viewpoint with enjoy this perceptive tale.
Harriet Klausner
5 of 7 found the following review helpful:
Fifty years of family triumphs and disappointments combined May 28, 2005
By Frederick A. Babb
"An Author,"
Through the eyes of Emil Czabek, we embark on a journey of discovery and reminiscence of the Czabek clan. The backdrop of the story is Emil making his way back home to celebrate the fiftieth wedding anniversary of his parents with his six siblings. What starts as a celebration for the parents, quickly converts into a bit of soul searching for everyone as they remember where they came from and how the decisions of the father have made each one who they are today.
The Czabek legacy started when Wally and Susan decided to tie the knot when they found themselves getting caught up in the celebration of the world after World War II America. Americans felt, at that time, anything was possible and Wally and Susan were no different. As time carried on, they quickly found themselves raising seven children in the flourishing suburbs of Chicago. While the world had a image of life in the suburbs as being ideal, the Wally found that the live he was raising his family in wasn't far from ideal.
In an attempt to find the greener fields on the other side of the mountain, Wally uproots the family and hauls them from the heart of America to the wilderness of rural Wisconsin. Thinking he had escape the trauma of big city Chicago, he quickly finds that the grass isn't always greener and there is more complications in what appeared to be a simpler life than he ever bargained for.
As the story unfolds, we watch fifty years of family spats, broken dreams and how each member of this unique, yet familiar family copes with finding themselves in life. In the end, we find that each member of this family has their own fair share of triumph and disappointment, but that the family unit manages to survive despite it all.
A combination of a man always seeking to find a way to better himself and his family mixed with the love and feel good feelings of the "Leave to Beaver" world, this book stirs memories and entertains all in one. Hribal provides a wonderful story that amuses at times and dares to challenge are own life as we find ourselves capable of relating to one adventure or another.
Frederick A. Babb
could have been really good Dec 08, 2009
By apala, opinionated librarian
"apala, opinionated librarian"
If the author had a better editor we would have had a better book. As it is, the problem of too many characters and too many mid-chapter time jumps detract from what could have been. Just a couple of examples: The character of the father starts to develop but gets stuck mid-book,and the ending leaves out the last 10 years of his life after the road trip with his son, the narrator...what happened? Where did he work? To be brief the ending itself disappoints - suddenly we seem to be on a symbolic journey after hundreds of 'real life' narrative. Huh? Too bad: it coulda been a real winner.
Solid, but not Riveting May 25, 2007
By Amos McLean Good relatable characters and an okay story made this a good book. Beneath the surface, I think the author did an exceptional job of showing the changing role of men in society and the insecurities that go along with it, as well as the challenges of watching our parents grow old and coming to grips with the realities of their lives from an adult perspective (rather than that of the seeming them through the eyes of the children we were).
See all 8 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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