"At the Shores" is a classic novel of love in America. Set in the Indiana dunes and Chicago, it tells the story of Jerry Engels, an appealing, handsome, middle-class boy, who even in elementary school finds himself forever in love: "He loved the girls in his class, the girls on the block, the maid at home, his sister's friends, some of his mother's friends. . . . He even loved girls he just happened to see out the window of the car." In high school--the renowned University of Chicago Laboratory High School--he strives to make the grades his academically superb sister made and his parents expect, but as the world becomes erotically charged for him, he finds it hard to study. Unlike other boys, who live according to the "approved doctrine that there are other things in the world besides girls--politics, cars, sports, finding out about things and fixing things, and making money"--Jerry cares only about girls. For him, "girls are a kind of blessing. When he saw a girl like Betty Lomax walking through Belfield Hall with a fresh flower tucked into her hair, he felt like kissing her out of gratitude for having bought that flower and put it in her hair." Then, at the end of his junior year, he falls deeply, passionately in love with Rosalind Ingleside, the most beautiful, respected, and wealthy girl in school, and for almost all of one summer Jerry's dream of loving and being loved is fulfilled. "If I had a class in American Adolescence, I'd teach "At the Shores" in tandem with "The Catcher in the Rye" and "Growing Up Absurd." This meticulously perceived and modest novel about growing up in America anything but absurd is probably closer to more lives than we might suspect. It does wonders for one's sense of reality." - Philip Roth
This is one of the most quietly beautiful books I have ever read. Set in Chicago and the mysterious world of the Indiana Dunes on the southern shore of Lake Michigan, Rogers evokes the feeling of two very different landscapes with seamless prose as he tells what will undoubtedly become one of the classic American coming-of-age novels. I appreciated the maturity of this book, which tells the story of a young boy who lusts after every girl he meets while longing, deep down, for a more profound and lasting relationship.
Move Over "Catcher in the Rye"!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Rogers is finally getting the critical acclaim he so richly deserves (see Cathleen Shine in the New York Review of Books). Philip Roth calls him the Evelyn Waugh of our time. "At the Shores" is a beautifully crafted coming of age story that will appeal to adults and teenagers alike; the writing shimmers on the page like the summer heat across the Indiana dunes Rogers lovingly describes. While so many modern novels rely on shock or style quirks to grab attention, Rogers captivates us the timeless way: with a moving story of authentic characters and emotion rendered in flawless prose. "At the Shores" should be combined with Rogers' three other major novels: "The Confessions of the Child of the Century," "The Pursuit of Happiness" and "Jerry Engels" (sequel to "At the Shores"), to appreciate the full arc of his talent. Just as Philip Larkin resurrected the incomparable charms of Barbara Pym's writing, we can only hope the new critical attention given to Rogers' work will now give a wider audience the pleasure of discovering him.
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