Back as promised.
Some reviewers have said, a bit dismissively, that Tyler's characters are "quirky". Well, perhaps they are. Conformists they are certainly not. Also, some, including Liam, clearly march to a different drummer. And yet there ARE 'odd' people like that, so why would it be wrong to write about them, carefully, objectively, uncritically? TWe can decide for ourselves whom we like and dislike. I will admitthat I find the alleged quirkiness rather endearing.
I like Tyler's stories. She usually begins with a simple idea, a notion, an ordinary occurrence, then we meet a protagonist,and from there the story unfolds. In Noah's Compass we meet Liam, a 60-year old teacher who's lost his job, must downsize, moves into cheaper quarters and goes to bed. Next he wakes up in the hospital with no recollection of what happened to him. We meet members of Liam's family and, from his solitary musings, learn more about his past. It is a slow process, but life is like that, isn't it? One day at a time. In the proces we are always waiting, waiting for something, more or less urgently ...
The characterizations are brilliant and I found myself nodding and smiling a lot, e.g. about Damian, "a limp, wilted seventeen-year old" who looked like an S carrying Liam's Windsor chair on his head. Liam's believes that Damian is perhaps " ...vacant" but actually a good guy, who could NOT have been the perpetrator of the assault on Liam, as his eldest daughter, Xanthe, claims.
Tyler's has a knack for portraying people- and the language they use- realistically and unhurriedly (Kitty and the unnecessary"likes") Reading anything by Tyler requires patience, especially when the characters follow a path we readers think is completely nonsensic and makes us cringe. Normally, people step up over time in their jobs or professions, but many do not, and liam is one of them. A bright boy with a promising future, his career took a downward spiral. We are not told why. Could we hazard a guess, time permitting? But who are we to reproach him for his meekness and poor choices? What is it to us as long as he is comfortable? He well knows that in his last job in the private school he used only 10% of his brain. (Also, he DOES have a plan, he mentions it in passing early on. - Moreover, Dr. Morrow , whose son Liam tutored, thinks highly of him.)
I do not believe that Liam intends to apply for a job at Cope Development. IMHO he would not fit. Improbably he 'latches on' to Eunice, but I think it's only because he hopes she might him retrieve his short-term lost memory. I think Eunice is an interesting character, psychologically. Can't you just see her standing there in her outlandish skirts and tops, her midriff showing? The two of them would be totally incongruous in y humble opinion.
We have met Xanthe and Kitty; in Chapter 7 we meet Liam's second daughter, Louise, and Noah, Liam's only grandson. Their introduction brings a new element into the story and conveys an idea of what the book's title means.
I apologize for m absence and will be back tomorrow. Good night.