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  1. Sep 24, 2007 · Sept. 24, 2007. Richard Russo sets “Bridge of Sighs” in a fictitious upstate New York town called Thomaston. It is yet another haven for this author’s favorite shirkers, burghers ...

  2. Sep 25, 2007 · Bridge of Sighs, also set in a small town, aims higher and sometimes (but not always) succeeds. 2. Bridge of Sighs, a fairly long book (642 pages), interweaves many characters and multiple generations. Russo is particularly strong with secrets and the ways in which individuals discover their own truths over longer periods of time.

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    • Hardcover
  3. Sep 25, 2007 · Book Summary. Bridge of Sighs courses with small-town rhythms and the claims of family. Here is a town, as well as a world, defined by magnificent and nearly devastating contradictions. Louis Charles (“Lucy”) Lynch has spent all his sixty years in upstate Thomaston, New York, married to the same woman, Sarah, for forty of them, their son ...

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  4. Bridge of Sighs is captivating for its loving attention to the town of Thomaston and the particularities of its downtrodden residents, but even the most innocuous detail maps a world much larger than Thomaston, a generous world that, by the end of the book, comes to seem so familiar, one is loathe to leave it. Reviewed by Amy Reading.

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    • Amy Reading
  5. Sep 25, 2007 · by Richard Russo. 1. Bridge of Sighs alternates two narratives: Lucy’s first-person memoir and the story of Robert Noonan. What are the advantages of this structure? How does it affect the way plot unfolds? Does it influence your impressions of the main characters? 2.

  6. Culture Books Reviews. Bridge Of Sighs, by Richard Russo A big American novel that zooms in on the little incidents of small-town life. Roz Kaveney. Thursday 04 October 2007 00:00 BST.

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  8. Oct 1, 2007 · One of the most impressive excursions into the supernatural in many a year. Share your opinion of this book. A dying town symbolizes arcs separately traced by people who abandon it and others who stubbornly stay home, believing change must be for the best, in Russo’s (The Whore’s Child: and Other Stories, 2005, etc.) crowded sixth novel.

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