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Atticus (1996)

par Ron Hansen

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5141547,458 (3.68)28
Ron Hansen has won an Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters for his rich writing and poetic style. Atticus begins in the vein of a contemporary western. As it unfolds, it includes an intriguing murder mystery and a dramatic parable of the prodigal son. For years, prosperous Colorado rancher Atticus Cody has tried to understand his rootless son, Scott, who is now living a marginal life in Mexico. When he learns that Scott is dead, apparently by suicide, Atticus travels to Mexico to claim the body. Instead, he discovers evidence of murder and a trail of clues that will lead him to a strange and wonderful epiphany. Suspense and conflict, love and forgiveness combine in this deft story of Atticus' search for his son. Each character stands out, sharply etched, against the bright Mexican landscape.… (plus d'informations)
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Affichage de 1-5 de 15 (suivant | tout afficher)
Good story. It has some interesting twists. Well written too. ( )
  kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
A Colorado rancher receives word that his rakehell younger son has committed suicide in Mexico, and sets out to claim the body and bring it home for burial. But he quickly discovers that things in Mexico are not quite what they seem to be.

Up to this point, the novel seems a pretty run-of-the-mill tale of a grieving man sussing out the oddities of a loved one's death, refusing to believe the official story, and trying to determine what really happened.

Then Hansen pulls the rug out from under the reader in the last chapter and the story becomes something else entirely. ( )
  LyndaInOregon | Dec 14, 2018 |
Rancher Atticus Cody doesn't understand his youngest son, Scott, but he loves him anyway. 40-year-old Scott is a troubled man who never really grew up. He suffers from some form of mental illness (probably bipolar disorder), and there is a hint of past tragedy that resulted in the death of Scott's mother/Atticus's wife. Although Atticus seems to have forgiven Scott (if he ever held it against him to begin with), Scott doesn't seem to have forgiven himself. Not long after Scott's Christmas visit, Atticus receives a call from Mexico, where Scott has been living. Scott has killed himself, and Atticus must go to Mexico to settle his estate. As Atticus examines the remnants of Scott's life and learns the details of his death, he begins to see incongruities between what he hears and what he observes. The evidence points to murder rather than suicide, and Atticus won't leave until his questions have been answered.

This novel is a modern retelling of the parable of the Prodigal Son. Catholic religious themes run throughout the book. Scott lived in a town called Resurrección, a name that also carries religious symbolism. The father in the Prodigal Son symbolizes God, and Atticus is likened to God in a conversation in the novel. Most readers will also associate him with Atticus Finch, the father in To Kill a Mockingbird. When Atticus is questioned about this in the novel, he replies that “Up until the sixties I had the name to myself.” While that may be true in the fictional universe of the novel, in the world of literature Atticus Finch preceded Atticus Cody by several decades. Since Atticus is such an unusual name, most readers wouldn't have needed the lines drawn for them to make that connection. It's tempting to read this as a crime novel since murder is involved, but when read through that lens it peaks too early. It's better to read it as the literary fiction it is. ( )
  cbl_tn | Jul 2, 2017 |
From the book jacket: Ron Hansen’s new novel opens in winter [in] Colorado, where rancher Atticus Cody receives an unexpected visit from his wayward young son. An artist and wanderer, Scott has recently settled into a life of heavy drinking and recklessness among expatriates and Mexicans in the little town of Resurreccion on the Caribbean coast. Weeks later, Atticus himself goes down to Mexico to recover the body of his son, thinking he has committed suicide. Puzzled by what he finds, he begins to suspect that Scott has been murdered.

My reactions
In many ways this story echoes the parable of the Prodigal Son from the bible. While there is certainly a mystery at its core, the novel is more about the father-son relationship: the father’s fierce and unfaltering love for his son, the son’s need to atone for past mistakes and despair at feeling unable to make amends, and the failure of both of them to openly communicate and understand one another.

The plot has several twists and turns that kept me intrigued and turning pages. But the star of the novel, to me, was the writing and the exploration of these characters and their motivations. I was completely engrossed in their story, and wanted to cheer at the end. ( )
  BookConcierge | Apr 22, 2016 |
Atticus. Ron Hansen. 1996. When he is notified that his younger son has killed himself in Mexico, Atticus Cody goes to Resurreccion bring Scott’s body back home. Scott was the “difficult” son who had been in and out of mental hospital but, Atticus’ love for his son never waivers. As Atticus searches for answers to Scott’s suicide, the story of Scott’s tortured life is revealed. This is a beautiful retelling of the parable of the prodigal son. I have also read two other books by Hansen: Mariette in Ecstasy (the story of a nun with a stigmata) and Exiles (an account of a ship wreck in which 5 nuns were killed that led Gerard Manley Hopkins to write “The Wreck of the Deutschland.” Hansen’s style reminds me of Richard Russo. ( )
  judithrs | May 12, 2014 |
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Ron Hansen has won an Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters for his rich writing and poetic style. Atticus begins in the vein of a contemporary western. As it unfolds, it includes an intriguing murder mystery and a dramatic parable of the prodigal son. For years, prosperous Colorado rancher Atticus Cody has tried to understand his rootless son, Scott, who is now living a marginal life in Mexico. When he learns that Scott is dead, apparently by suicide, Atticus travels to Mexico to claim the body. Instead, he discovers evidence of murder and a trail of clues that will lead him to a strange and wonderful epiphany. Suspense and conflict, love and forgiveness combine in this deft story of Atticus' search for his son. Each character stands out, sharply etched, against the bright Mexican landscape.

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