Jean has been living on her
own since she checked Bub into a nursing home after he suffered a stroke. When
the English teacher at the high school approached her about contacting Mary to
do a show, Jean was hesitant but complaint. Throughout most of the book she
anxiously awaits her daughter’s return, trying to understand her abusive
relationship with her husband and distant relationship with Mary. She
coincidentally meets Garbagio’s father—his wife is in the same nursing home as
Bub—and the two strike up a friendship. Jean is also incredibly devout, and
much of the book focuses on how she grounds herself with her faith.
There is a cast of secondary
characters that float in and out of the book, but Mary and Jean are the staples
that keep the novel propelling forward. Although the book is told in the
third-person omniscient, I found most of the closer looks at secondary
characters to be a bit unnecessary. I was always most interested in Mary and
Jean.
Wayward Saints is Roche’s debut novel, and it is somewhat uneven because of that. For
example, Mary seems very authentic and her character is fully conveyed to the
audience. Somehow, she doesn’t fall into the stereotypes of “alternative rocker
chick” and manages to seem fresh and interesting. However, there are other
parts of the book that are less realistic or fleshed out. The conversations
between Jean and Garbagio’s father are ones I know are supposed to be
meaningful but felt a little trite to me. Whenever I was reading the dialogue,
I kept thinking that their conversations needed to go a little deeper, and the
word choice needed to be a little more original. The dialogue itself felt flat,
even though I cared about both of the characters and their relationship. “This
is exactly how I would expect older people to interact with each other,” I
found myself thinking.
Another place of unevenness
was the theme of religion and faith. The references to religion and the
characters’ attachment (or discord) from God are constantly present throughout
the novel. However, Roche needed to expand the theme a little more. When Mary
was a child, she thought she was visited—and fondled—by the Virgin Mary. Mary finds this memory to be somewhat of a
comfort, and states the Virgin gave her the strength to sing. Her devout mother
finds this vision appalling. By the end of the novel, I couldn’t quite
understand what we were supposed to
feel about religion. Is it a support system? A fantasy? A crux? All of these
things?
I did appreciate the way the
book looks at the music industry. It is critical of it (for its drugs, money,
alcohol) but also encapsulates the magic of a good live show, which can be a
quasi-religious experience in itself. I think in the future Roche will be able
to flesh out her novels a bit better. I was reminded of when I reviewed High Fidelity. One of the things I loved
about that book was that it was equal parts a wonderful book about music and a
wonderful book about relationships. Wayward
Saints is a wonderful book about music and an ok book about relationships. More than anything, the book just had the feeling of being published a draft too soon. But
the prose is beautiful, clean, and descriptive. And I have faith that Roche’s
second novel will be even and masterful.
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