Reviews

The Realm of Last Chances by Steve Yarbrough

elbowgrip_and_emdash's review against another edition

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4.0

A solid novel with strong, unshowy writing. As someone who currently lives in Boston, it was fun to read a novel set in Boston/Greater Boston. Yarbrough passes among myriad third-person narrators, employing at times a successful use of flash forward/"what if" that points at the true omniscient nature of his narration. I was underwhelmed by the main subplot (violations of academic integrity at Kristin's new college) as well as the reveal of Cal's past violence, which more or less is the closing note of the book (and the opening, sorta, since we learn early that he's changed his name). Still, a solid novel, as I said, with a lot to be gleaned in terms of craft and technique (I say this also as one of his students). I will be reading more from this author.

suszsz's review against another edition

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dark emotional slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

gweiswasser's review against another edition

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2.0

The Realm of Last Chances is about Kristen and Cal Stevens, a married couple who moves from the Central Valley of California to Boston after Kristen is laid off from her college administration job in California. She finds another job at a third-tier college outside Boston, and the two start their lives over again on the East Coast. However, it turns out only to be a fresh start geographically. The couple, who had been growing apart in California, find themselves even more distant from each other in their new home. Cal, who was a handyman in California, spends his days playing stringed instruments and fixing up their new house. Kristen finds herself embroiled in new but familiar challenges facing college administrators, such as professor plagiarism and tenure negotiations. As the book progresses, we also learn about the skeletons in Kristen and Cal’s closets – failed marriages, broken homes, violence – and how they shaped the main characters.

Matt Drinnan, the Stevens’ neighbor and a man with his own troubled past, meets the couple shortly after their arrival in Massachusetts. Ultimately his relationship with Kristen drives her and Cal further apart, as he seeks his own reinvention and redemption for his own transgressions.
The good: I liked the glimpse The Realm of Last Chances gave into these unusual characters’ lives. I feel like I read so many books about urban thirtysomething parents, and it was refreshing to explore the lives of these struggling middle-aged suburbanites. Yarbrough’s writing is crisp and descriptive. There are themes throughout the book – infidelity, forgiveness, and how well we really know our partners – that I thought Yarbrough skillfully weaved among multiple characters and contexts.

However, I don’t think I really got this book. I found a lot of it implausible – how could Kristin and Cal have been so incurious about each other’s pasts? do people really ask relative strangers to hold them? can one really read lips looking through a window between homes? – and much of the rest of it was either too convenient or just kind of boring. I got to the end of the book, which felt slapped on and too tidy, and wondered what the point was. I didn’t feel very optimistic about these characters’ futures – they just kind of limped off into the sunset.

I enjoyed the beginning of The Realm of Last Chances more than the end. Kristin and Cal’s disorientation upon arriving across the country, her introduction to her new job – those were compelling. As the story progressed, however, it sort of lost me. The plagiarism storyline didn’t make much sense to me – how was Kristin to blame for how the story came to light? – and the grand reveal about Cal’s violent past seemed inopportune.

Goodreads abounds with very positive reviews of The Realm of Last Chances, so there are clearly many fans of this book out there.

simsarah79's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 stars. very good insights into a troubled marriage.. people's pasts, dealing with personal relations at work - the line between the professional and personal and friendship between men. Loved it.
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