Metacritic Books

The Coast Of Akron
by Adrienne Miller

ISBN: 0374125120
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 400 pages, $25.00
Fiction General Literature & Fiction
Released 05/04/2005

The first novel from Miller (Esquire's literary editor) is a humorous look at a dysfunctional family in Akron, Ohio.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

60 / 100

Critic Reviews

Favorable Chicago Tribune Adam Langer
Imaginative, refreshingly eccentric and, at times, strangely moving, this is truly a book whose characters stay with you long after you have put them back on the shelf. [1 May 2005, p.C3]
Favorable Los Angeles Times James Marcus
It's campy, complicated and almost unnervingly professional, as though Adrienne Miller had been knocking out this stuff for years. [1 May 2005, p.R10]
Favorable Salon Rebecca Traister
Sometimes Miller oversteps, and despite her efforts to truss up her characters with precise and evocative sentences, she allows them to slip and ooze all over the place.... This is forgivable, though, because buried beneath the spun-sugar absurdity of "The Coast of Akron" is a terrifically compelling and original tale about art, gender, ownership and identity.
Favorable Washington Post Curtis Sittenfeld
The Coast of Akron is an imperfect book, but Miller's enormous talent is evident on every page.
Favorable The New York Times Book Review Elissa Schappell
Oddly enough, it isn't the zany plot that provides the most excitement. Instead, the pyrotechnics come from Miller's enormous wit and linguistic creativity.
Favorable The Independent John Freeman
As a farce, the book could not be more bizarre, or more dead-on-target.
Mixed The New Yorker
Eventually chokes to death on its own whimsy.
Mixed Boston Globe Daniel Akst
The real problem with ''The Coast of Akron" is the last 50 pages or so, in which this seemingly healthy, vigorous narrative undergoes some kind of tragic cardiac arrhythmia and simply falls apart.
Mixed San Francisco Chronicle Jennie Yabroff
One fears that all the tinsel and feathers in the book may be an attempt to camouflage a lack of confidence in the worthiness of her story.
Mixed Village Voice Amy Farley
She's more concerned with tracing her characters' mental dissolution than with constructing a compelling plot, and the novel's conclusion is deeply unsatisfying.
Mixed Wall Street Journal Stephen Barbara
Though Ms. Miller follows her best instincts in writing the poignant story of Merit Haven, she sorely tries the reader's patience by devoting so much of the book to the affected and unlikable pair of Lowell and Fergus.
Mixed New York Observer David Thomson
The trouble is that Ms. Miller can write: She has a voice, as well as a fine comic sense of madness and an air of danger that suggests this novel is always about to burst out into the open fields... [but she] doesn't really do plot very well, or character, let alone the kind of underlying gravitational pull (call it moral imperative, or sustained interest) that keeps you reading. [2 May 2005, p.23]
Mixed Publishers Weekly
The trouble is that the scenes don't hang together. [7 Mar 2005, p.47]
Mixed Kirkus Reviews
It's all funny for a while, but eventually the reader feels as if trapped at an endless cocktail party. [1 Mar 2005, p.253]
Mixed Library Journal Starr E. Smith
There is promising satirical material here, but episodic pacing and two-dimensional, stereotypical characterizations undermine its promise. [1 Apr 2005, p.87]

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