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Book Review of Loon Lake

Loon Lake
Loon Lake
Author: E.L. Doctorow
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Book Type: Paperback
perryfran avatar reviewed on + 1228 more book reviews


This was a somewhat challenging book to read. Doctorow used various writing styles throughout the book going from 1st person to 3rd person narration, then including a stream of consciousness style (similar to Faulkner) where the narration goes on for several pages without punctuation or clear sentences, he then also includes some passages in poetry. But if you can get through all that, the story is quite interesting about a young man (Joe) during the depression of the 1930s who works as a carnival roustabout (some scenes here are quite harrowing) and then finds his way to Loon Lake which is owned by a rich eccentric who entertains the rich and famous there (similar to Hearst castle). Joe meets a failed poet at the lake who encourages him along the way, he falls in love, and then moves on to a town in Indiana where he gets involved in union intrigue at an auto plant owned by the rich eccentric of Loon Lake. I have read other Doctorow novels that I really enjoyed but in this one, I think he was trying too hard to use too many different literary techniques which I felt distracted from the story. In some places these techniques made me feel like I had lost my way in the story. Overall, a mild recommendation.