In the company of others [electronic resource] : a Father Tim novel / Jan Karon.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781101465769 (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
- ISBN: 110146576X (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
- ISBN: 9781101465981 (electronic bk. : Adobe EPUB)
- ISBN: 1101465980 (electronic bk. : Adobe EPUB)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource (399 p.)
- Publisher: New York : Viking, 2010.
Content descriptions
General Note: | Description based on print version record. |
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Subject: | Clergy > Fiction. Americans > Ireland > Fiction. |
Genre: | Christian fiction. Domestic fiction. Electronic books. |
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Electronic resources
- Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2010 August #2
Book two of Karon's new series about an Episcopal priest, The Father Tim Novels (Home to Holly Springs, 2007), continues as Father Tim's long-awaited Ireland vacation turns into a busman's holiday.
Father Tim Kavanagh, 70, and his wife, children's author Cynthia, 64, have arrived at Broughadoon fishing lodge for a second honeymoon. A repeat visitor to the lodge, Tim re-encounters the proprietors, Anna Conor, her husband Liam and Anna's daughter Bella, now a truculent teenager. Anna's aging father William is the residentÃÂ eminence grise. Until William bought it, Broughadoon was once part of the estate of Evelyn Conor, chatelaine of the adjacent manor house, Catharmore. The once lovely Evelyn, Liam's formidable mother, is now an elderly alcoholic still furious with William for welshing on his youthful promise of marriage. (Instead, she married wealthy Riley Conor.) As if to prove there's no vacation from Tim's vocation, spiritually unsettling stuff happens. An intruder leaps out of a wardrobe, startling Cynthia, who stumbles, respraining her recently healed ankle. A priceless painting disappears from Broughadoon's parlor. His Catholic hosts seek Tim out as an informal confessor. Anna is worried that William may actually be Liam's father. Liam frets about the same possibility. William still regrets abandoning Evelyn. Meanwhile over at Catharmore, Evelyn has decided to detox and give her geriatric liver a fighting chance, only to suffer injuries in a fall. Tim accompanies Evelyn to the hospital (the Catholic priest being off on his own holiday) because her older son Paddy has retreated into his own boozy haze. Father Tim sees in Bella the same type of implacability that led him to take on his troubled adopted son Dooley. Can he foster similar paternal determination in Liam? Tim and Cynthia peruse a journal, circa 1861, written by Catharmore's first owner. The long journal entries do little to advance the present story but are sometimes a welcome diversion from it.
Readers who are not devoted followers of Karon may be impatient with the glacial pace of this installment.
Copyright Kirkus 2010 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 May #2
In the second in a new Karon series begun with Home to Holly Springs, Cynthia joins Father Tim on a sojourn to Ireland, where they discover that tragedy has splintered the family owning the lodge where they are staying. Karon calls this "dark-haired child" her personal favorite. With a six-city tour. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information. - LJ Express Reviews : LJ Express Reviews
Father Tim Kavanagh first appeared in Karon's popular Mitford series, which focused on small-town life in rural North Carolina, and later launched his own series in Home to Holly Springs. This new novel finds him grudgingly traveling with his wife in Ireland. A series of mishaps leaves the Kavanaghs at an Irish lodge for the entire vacation, allowing them time to become caught up in the lives of the owners, uncovering old secrets and finding resolutions to generational conflicts. Verdict Travel might not suit Father Tim, but the new setting breathes new life into Karon's stories. The novel is at its best when the Irish characters are on stage, especially those whose story is told through an old journal. Fans will want to continue the series; enough backstory is provided to make this accessible to new readers. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 5/15/10.]âJan Blodgett, Davidson Coll. Lib., NC (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2010 August #5
In Karon's latest, Fr. Timothy Kavanagh, the moral center of the beloved Mitford series, hops the Atlantic for a long anticipated vacation in the Irish countryside. He and his wife settle in at Broughadoon, a B&B run by Liam and Anna Conor in County Sligo, and Father Tim is happy to be reacquainted with his ancestral homeland. He's particularly taken with Catharmore, a sprawling 19th-century estate that was Liam's childhood home. When their stay is extended because of an injury, the Kavanaghs pass the time reading up on Catharmore's history, helping out around the grounds, and getting to know the area's many colorful characters. Father Tim assumes the role of confidant and adviser to the Conors and their extended family, investigating a burglary, helping unburden Liam and Anna of long-held secrets, and aiding Liam's alcoholic mother to recover her lost faith. Karon's prose trundles along at a languid pace, but her heartfelt dialogue and rich characterizations keep the story engaging. Though it's not the ideal entry point to the expansive world of Father Tim, fans will relish this new chapter in his life. (Oct.)
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