Cover Image: French Braid

French Braid

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

Anne Tyler is one of my favorite authors for a reason: she understands people, and she tells very specific stories in ways that resonate almost universally. This book is a treasure, and I will be sharing it like a rare treat.

Was this review helpful?

Classic Anne Tyler book, set in her adopted city of Baltimore. Story centers around the Garrett family, spanning the 1950s to the present pandemic. She takes us through multiple generations, and explores all the eccentricities of their family, which in reality apply to every family. The characters age, they quarrel, they divorce, they like and then dislike one another. Most touchingly and thoughtfully, she shows us how seemingly trivial events can have such profound long standing consequences -a forte in every one of her books. There is a character for each of us to identify with-I will not share mine😂😂
Tyler hits another “home run”.

Was this review helpful?

Anne Tyler is so skilled at writing about human and family relationships. This story is so fitting of the title, as the relationships of this family weave in and out between family members and others in their community.....sometimes becoming tightly woven, yet sometimes slipping out of place during a messy time of life. I always enjoy her writing and this was one of my favorites.

Was this review helpful?

Anne Tyler is a master of the family novel, I was first introduced to her through the movie adaptation of The Accidental Tourist. I then plunged into her body of written work. I've never been disappointed with any of her writing. French Braid is another winner.

Was this review helpful?

This is the story of the Garrett family, told from the point of view of various famliy members through the decades.

Was this review helpful?

Anne Tyler does not disappoint. This story of a Baltimore family through the years will resonate with readers.

Was this review helpful?

This is another quiet tale of relationships from Anne Tyler. She is a master at painting those little domestic interiors with her words. The Garrett family consists of mom, dad, Alice, the “little mother”, Lily, the irresponsible one” and David the young introspective son. Their roles become obvious on their one family vacation, a trip to a lake cabin in 1959. The story moves on in time from then. We see the parents changing relationship, and each child’s need to pull away. This is also a tail of how families protect one another, never mentioning the elephant in the room.

Was this review helpful?

I've been a big fan of Tyler's for many years. This novel is as good an example as any of her ability to create engrossing reads that defy an attempt to summarize the plot because the plot is not really a sequence of events so much as a flow of character development in ordinary lives. And these characters are palpable, have an identifying odor, and stick with you for a few days. Or they simply move in with you.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to Net Galley for the advance ebook copy. This is a tightly compacted family story. I love Anne Tyler's prose; it is succinct, yet oddly descriptive in its brevity. French Braid is the story of a Baltimore family beginning with the marriage of Robin and Mercy in 1940. The story does travel back and forth in time but not in a way that is discombobulating. The members of this family never quite feel like their family is ENOUGH, but family is hard, and I appreciated the way Tyler conveys this so that the reader sympathizes with characters that may not always be likeable. This is an engrossing, one-sitting read!

Was this review helpful?

Another wonderful novel from Anne Tyler. She captures family life so well. French Braid covers the Garrett family from the 1950s to present day. There's even a bit of Covid lockdown. Some of the characters are quirky, but they are believable. This would make a fine book discussion title.

Was this review helpful?

Sitting down with an Anne Tyler book gives me the same warm and comfortable feeling I get when I turn into my parents' driveway. She's a favorite author for me and a favorite of my mother's as well-in fact, most of the Anne Tyler books I've read were borrowed from my mom. I've read Tyler since high school when I was probably too young to relate to most of her characters. Today in middle age I do relate, and French Braid does not disappoint in its familiarity and relatability.

French Braid follows the Garrett family from the 1950s when they take a family vacation through the lives of each of the family members, ending with their experiences in the pandemic. We watch births, deaths, marriages, and divorces. I found myself falling in love with this entire family.

Anne Tyler's newest novel is like a wonderful peek into the photo albums of an ordinary American family. Her exceptional talent is in showing us just how very extraordinary the ordinary can be.

Was this review helpful?

For fans of Anne Tyler, the story of a family through several different time periods. The members of the family are not particularly close but are still woven together like a French braid. That’s where the title comes from.

Was this review helpful?

What is it that makes Anne Tyler novels so special? Her aching humanity? Her pleasure in the quirks of her characters? Her embrace of the dysfunction of life? There's always one character whose life will pivot and that person will head in a direction no one, least of all them, expected. The result is a surprised and heartened reader.

The Garretts of "French Braid" run a hardware store in Baltimore, and in 1959, dad Robin decides they need a vacation. They've never been on vacation before and aren't quite sure what to do, but this week will have repercussions for decades.

As in nearly all Tyler's books, there's someone with a hope and a dream they have to explore. In this case, it's mom Mercy, who studied art and has to find a way to get back to painting. Her idea of how to make money with her work is so insightful and offbeat that you know that art was her real calling.

Is this the best Anne Tyler book? No. But nonetheless, it does a beautiful job of letting us see the foibles of our fellows with a kinder eye. Perfect for these difficult times.

Was this review helpful?

Another wonderful novel from this author! Her faithful readers are going to love it, as will readers new to her who are seeking a quietly compelling intergenerational family story that's full of unexpected moments. While the story centers around a couple, Mercy and Robin, who married in the 1950s, it goes back and forth in time to explore the stories of their children and grandchildren as well. I look forward to recommending this excellent book, which would also be a perfect choice for a book discussion group.

Was this review helpful?

A new Anne Tyler! I was pretty giddy about this. The most recent book of hers felt like a tease-it was good Tyler writing, but somewhat short and unsatisfying. I'm pleased to say, this book was the real Anne Tyler deal. A multigenerational story, slightly dysfunctional family, of course set in Baltimore. Her writing was as good as ever and I wish I could share some specific sentences, but I can't. In part because I read this on my Kindle (and don't know how to use any note taking features of it.)
One part reminded me so much of Ladder of Years-a woman creating a spare space outside her family home, distancing herself from them (which makes it seem like I yearn for that and I do not.)
Tempting to say "what a bunch of weirdos" about the characters, but they are not terrible people. I loved seeing their quirks (and yes, some frankly weird behavior) and just being swept up in this family story. I think what's interesting about her books is that there really aren't any huge exciting plot moments or suspense, I just love her way with words and characterization.

Was this review helpful?

No one writes about families better than Anne Taylor. Her characters are quirky, relationships are messy, and, yet, no matter how near or far away, family is everything.

Was this review helpful?

Ann Tyler has a reputation as an intuitive empathetic author. In my experience over the years her stories have gotten bleaker and bleaker. In the opening section of French Braid we are introduced to a family with no sympathetic characters . I kept pushing on through the second time period when we concentrate on Mercy, the mother of the family who fancies herself an artist and independent woman. I kept reading until she did something heartless and in my mind unforgivable and gave up on her and Anne Tyler. I don’t need unicorns and lollipops, but her action was beyond the pale.

Was this review helpful?

In FRENCH BRAID, Anne Tyler skillfully weaves the stories of four generations of the Baltimore Garrett family, from a rare vacation in in 1959 to quarantining in 2020 to quarantining in 2020.

Was this review helpful?

There is something so comforting about an Anne Tyler book in a time of enormous change. You will., predictably, find even writing about family topics usually based in the Baltimore area. You will also, predictably, find the cracks under the surface of an outwardly functioning family. That is a concise description of French Braid which spans the decades from the 1950s through the beginning of the current Pandemic. The pater (and mater) familias of the Garrett clan are typical post war people. Immediately you notice that Robin is the husband, an unusual name for a man unless you think of Christopher Robin. The wife is named Mercy. She is not merciful and she admits to the fact that the couple married too young. Their family is typical for the post-war era. A working husband and a stay at home mother and three very unique children.

Alice, the oldest, dreams of her her life being narrated by a voiceover giving her life the importance she would like. Lily is totally unlike her sister, a bit wild and unmanageable and a Daddy's girl. Baby David is an afterthought and an obvious disappointment to his father who doesn't understand his interests or his fears.

As soon as the children launch from the nest, Mercy realizes that she is unfulfilled and makes a stealthy break from her husband. Robin hopes that if he pretends he and his wife are still a unit, the trouble between his wife and him will somehow blow over.

Children marry and have other children. While the parents stay in the Baltimore area, some of children and most of the grandchildren fly further. Mores change and social evolution is part and parcel of the Garrett family.

The only petty quarrel I have with the book is that occasionally Ms Tyler forgets which person in the generation spanning family is speaking and a turn of phrase comes out of a younger character's mouth that is uncomfortably odd for their era.

However, focus on the story. The story is a piece of Americana, that twists and turns as America itself learns that who you love is less important than that you love, and that marriage is not forever and a person can slip out the door of a closed cage.

This is a wonderful book. It's perfect for readers looking for a "cozy" read, with surprising characters who are easily recognized as members of our own families.

Was this review helpful?

I enjoyed this book although the ending was a bit abrupt. But I love everything by Anne Tyler, she is one of my favorite authors.

Was this review helpful?