Book Review – Lillian Boxfish Takes A Walk by Kathleen Rooney

About the Book

It’s the last day of 1984, and 85-year-old Lillian Boxfish is about to take a walk.

As she traverses a grittier Manhattan, a city anxious after an attack by a still-at-large subway vigilante, she encounters bartenders, bodega clerks, chauffeurs, security guards, bohemians, criminals, children, parents, and parents-to-be—in surprising moments of generosity and grace. While she strolls, Lillian recalls a long and eventful life that included a brief reign as the highest-paid advertising woman in America—a career cut short by marriage, motherhood, divorce, and a breakdown.

A love letter to city life—however shiny or sleazy—Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk paints a portrait of a remarkable woman across the canvas of a changing America: from the Jazz Age to the onset of the AIDS epidemic; the Great Depression to the birth of hip-hop.

Format: ebook (304 pages) Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
Publication date: 17th January 2017 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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My Review

Lillian is stylish, witty (even waspish at times), single-minded, successful, generous but also a woman whose life has not followed an untroubled path.  During her walk on New Year’s Eve, we learn about her pioneering career in advertising, her relationships and get hints of darker times that are only fully revealed towards the end of the book.  Lillian takes pride in her ability to use words as tools (whether to craft advertising copy or poetry) but also, on occasions, as weapons. Some of my favourites “Lillianisms” include:

  • “My mother resented Sadie like a stepsister resenting Cinderella, but she was polite. She did her no social violence.”
  • “This time of year is depressing. New Year’s Eve is a bigger thug than any mugger, the way it makes people feel.”
  • (About her colleague and bête noire, Olive): “I marvelled at her mother’s prescience in having named her daughter after a green – with envy – cocktail garnish: hollow and bitter.” Ouch!
  • (About her other bête noire, Julia): “She had a beautiful smile, if you like people who have thousands of teeth and no evident capacity ever to be sad.” Double ouch!

As well as the story of Lillian’s life, the book is a love letter to New York – “Any day you walk down a street and find nothing new but nothing missing counts as a good day in a city you love. People are forever tearing something down, replacing something irreplaceable” – and a celebration of walking and the art of flanerie. “Typically neither closeness nor distance matter much to me on my walks. Neither convenience nor difficulty is my objective.”

Another theme seems to be how bigotry and prejudice can cause people to miss out on potentially fulfilling relationships. I really enjoyed the book but, for me, not all of Lillian’s encounters during her walk were as successful or as meaningful as others. I was interested to learn that Lillian is inspired by a real person – Margaret Fishback, who, like her fictional counterpart, was a poet and the highest-paid female advertising copywriter in the world in the 1930s.  P.S. I love the cover.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press

In three words: Stylish, witty, engaging

About the Author

Kathleen Rooney is a founding editor of Rose Metal Press, a nonprofit publisher of literary work in hybrid genres, as well as a founding member of Poems While You Wait, a team of poets and their typewriters who compose commissioned poetry on demand. She teaches in the English Department at DePaul University, and her recent books include the national best-seller Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk (St. Martin’s Press, 2017) and the novel Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey (Penguin, 2020). Where Are the Snows, her latest poetry collection, was chosen by Kazim Ali for the X.J. Kennedy Prize and published by Texas Review Press in Fall 2022. In September of 2023, her novel, From Dust to Stardust, based on the life and work of the silent movie star Colleen Moore, came out with Lake Union. With her sister Beth Rooney, she is the author of the picture book Leaf Town Forever, forthcoming in 2026 from University of Minnesota Press.

Her reviews and criticism have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Poetry Foundation website, The New York Times Book Review, AllureThe Chicago Review of Books, The Chicago TribuneThe Paris Review, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Nation and elsewhere.

She lives in Chicago with her spouse, the writer Martin Seay. (Photo/bio: Author website)

Connect with Kathleen
 Website | Bluesky

Book Review – The Fortunate Brother by Donna Morrissey

About the Book

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After being uprooted from their fishing outport, the Now family is further devastated by the tragic loss of their eldest son, Chris, who died working on an Alberta oil rig. Kyle Now is still mourning his older brother when the murder of a local bully changes everything. The victim’s blood is found on the family’s pier, and suspicion falls first on an alienated wife, and then finally on the troubled Now family.

But behind this new turmoil, Chris’s death continues to plague the family. Father Sylvanus Now drowns his sorrow in a bottle, while mother Addie is facing breast cancer. And the children fight their own battles as the tension persists between Kyle and his sister, Sylvie, over her role in their brother’s death.

Format: Hardcover (272 pages) Publisher: Canongate
Publication date: 20th April 2017 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I only realised this is the third in a three-volume series of books after I started to read it but I felt it worked well as a standalone read.  However, it made me curious to know more about the events that have brought the family to this point so I may well look out the previous two books. 

Initially, I thought this was going to be a depressing read because of the troubled nature of all the characters and it took me a while to get used to Morrissey’s writing style.  Not being familiar with Newfoundland culture, I can’t testify to the authenticity of the vocabulary and dialogue but it seemed right for the characters and pretty soon I adjusted to the rhythm.  

The story is a combination of family drama and murder mystery but the mystery element doesn’t feel tacked on because the way the various characters react to events (in particular the main protagonist, Kyle) seems believable given their state of mind. 

The unseen but ever present emotional heart of the book is Chris, Kyle’s brother, who has died in an oil rig accident before the book opens. In various ways, all the family are struggling to cope with their grief and/or guilt at his death.  In particular, Kyle, seen as the “fortunate brother” because he’s still alive. 

Morrissey adeptly plays out how the surviving family members are driving themselves apart when they are at greatest need of coming together: “Too isolated in their loneliness to feel the good still left to them.”  Although bleak at times, this was an engrossing read.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of Canongate Books via NetGalley.

In three words: Atmospheric, emotional, gritty

About the Author

Donna Morrissey is the award-winning author of Kit’s Law, Downhill Chance, What They Wanted, and Sylvanus Now, which was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. She grew up in The Beaches, a small fishing outport in Newfoundland & Labrador and now lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

Connect with Donna
Website