This book is part of my reading list for my masters, and as such, not something I would have ever picked off the shelf, especially based on its title (it sounds like a beach read to me, which I tend to stay away from).
However, I’m happy to report that I loved this book. Spanning the early 1940s to 1999, “The End of the Point” follows a WASP family’s history through their summer vacations in Ashaunt, Massachusetts. Told through the eyes of the family nurse maid, the oldest daughter, and later her oldest son, the book captures the happiness, cantankerous nature, and often sorrowful moments of what it means to be part of a family.
The story begins in 1942 when the Porter family comes to Ashanaut to find an army base being built for the potential invasion by German forces. The narration switches back and forth between Bea, the Porter family nurse maid, and the oldest girl, Helen, giving a great juxtaposition of the adult vs. the teenage experience of the war years.
The middle part of the novel is written as letters that Helen is sending to her parents from her study-abroad in Switzerland and personally, I think they’re the weakest part of the story since the texture and character insights aren’t as strong since we’re only getting Helen’s young (and mostly selfish) thoughts.
The book then skips to the late ‘60s and follows Helen’s oldest son, Charlie, who in an effort to avoid his mother and her high expectations, makes a slew of poor adolescent decisions and finds himself escaping to Ashanaut at every possible opportunity to figure himself out.
I’ll be completely honest, the last 5 chapters broke me. Graver does a great job of building these characters into real people through her different narrative views, back stories and 3rd-person omniscient introspection. I often put this book down and forgot that these people didn’t actually exist, so there was something truly heartbreaking about reading the course of someone’s entire life in only 300 pages.
Graver’s language and writing style are simple and lyrical. While there’s no plot to this book, watching the characters morph and grow from children to adults to aged and old is as reflective as it is relatable since everyone has had some family experience they can see in the pages of this book.