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The Great Far Away
Date of Review: 
Feb.01.2007
Published Work: 
Source: 
Publishers Weekly

Frank's second novel, a compact, bittersweet tale capturing the essence of carefree youth and lost innocence, watches two young couples grow as their once-idyllic northern California town succumbs to the era of shopping malls. An old letter inspires Annie Freed to reminiscence of how she'd joined a clan of young adults in "sweet, open-ended" 1970s Ferris, Calif., a "sleepy town" that "still thought the year was somewhere around 1952." Two couples, Randy and Alma Winslow and Graham and Darla Payne, are the major players, and everyone has a great time until the early '80s, when the couples have babies and Ferris begins growing suburban and commercial. Fatherhood particularly traumatizes Graham, and marital discord racks the two couples. Frank's prose style remains deft, and she creates secondary characters as vibrant as the laid-back town that transforms into a suffocating suburb like a "spreading amoeba." The droll and wistful Annie provides a satisfying backward glance without becoming too nostalgic or sentimental.