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Book Review: Amity Gaige's "Schroder"

Kelly Thunstrom, editor/publisher of 1776books.net, reviews "Schroder", by Amity Gaige.

 

Amity Gaige’s Schroder is an exquisitely written novel that takes the reader completely inside a confession to the main character’s wife.  From the beginning, you know that the confessor, Erik Schroder, is a very unreliable narrator, so from that point forward, you don’t know whether to believe anything he says. 

The novel begins with Erik as a young boy living in Boston, having recently immigrated into the country from Germany with his father.  On a whim, he impulsively changes his name to Eric Kennedy on a summer camp application, and from that point on, that alias is what he is known by (unbeknownst to his father).  He grows up, gets married to Laura, and eventually they have a daughter, Meadow.  The family is happy for awhile, but as often happens nowadays, they grow apart.  Eric is not happy with his child’s custody arrangement and so decides to take matters into his own hands by kidnapping her.  The reader believes that Meadow is perfectly safe in Eric’s hands, but Schroder gets more and more intense when she discovers this may not be entirely true.

Click here to read the rest of this review and see Kelly's rating.

Kelly Thunstrom is the editor and publisher of 1776books.net. You can also follow her on twitter at@1776books.

Related Topics: Book, Book Review, Books, and book reviews

Lyn Cognito

10:13 pm on Thursday, March 7, 2013

Thanks for a great review and the link to your site. I now have some new titles I'm excited to read.

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