Also published on this date: Shelf Awareness for Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Tuesday October 15, 2024: Maximum Shelf: A Forty Year Kiss


Sourcebooks Landmark: A Forty Year Kiss by Nickolas Butler

Sourcebooks Landmark: A Forty Year Kiss by Nickolas Butler

Sourcebooks Landmark: A Forty Year Kiss by Nickolas Butler

Sourcebooks Landmark: A Forty Year Kiss by Nickolas Butler

A Forty Year Kiss

by Nickolas Butler

In A Forty Year Kiss, Nickolas Butler treats readers to an arresting, life-affirming novel that examines the hopes of second chance love. This passionate romance, however, is not all hugs and kisses, flowers and chocolates. This is a deeply affecting novel that brilliantly examines how life and the passage of time changes people--or does it?

A stunningly crafted opening scene set in a small-town watering hole--the Tomahawk Room in Chippewa Falls, Wis.--backbones the story. Sixty-four-year-old Charlie Fallon waits at the bar, fidgety, frightened, and anxious with "love-crazy hopes," for the arrival of Vivian Peterson, his 62-year-old ex-wife. After inheriting a house and farm nearby, the retired Charlie has moved back to his old stomping grounds from Albuquerque, N.Mex., and has been sprucing up the property bequeathed to him, a project that inspires him to take a leap and reconnect with Viv, whom he hasn't seen in 40 years.

Charlie has always loved Vivian, and for four decades she has lingered in his heart as he entered into other relationships and endured two other marriages that he admits failed through his own fault. Charlie and Viv had fallen head over heels when they were in their 20s--"kids driven by attraction. They were in love. In lust, more to the point." This led to their marriage in 1980. Yet, by 1984, the couple had divorced. After the split, Charlie got his life on track, building a successful and meaningful career working for the railroad. He also--rather inadvertently, through friends--reaped a financial windfall, investing wisely at the dawn of the Internet age. Yet in the last few years, Charlie--handsome, a smart dresser--has become haunted by Viv. "Haunt is a strong word, but that was the only word for it. Haunt. His memories of her. His regrets.... she'd never left his mind, not completely. You can't love someone the way they had loved each other and then just forget, forget everything."

Charlie's inheritance may have initiated his return to Wisconsin and his looking up Vivian, to see what had become of her life. But other factors came into play, too: his aging and retirement; his suffering with infirm family and loved ones, some of whom have died; and his witnessing friends making memories with families of their own--an aspect of life that escaped Charlie.

Viv's rationale in accepting Charlie's invitation for their reunion is simply curiosity and boredom--and not having been out on a date in a very long time. When Viv finally arrives at the Tomahawk Room to meet Charlie after four decades, she is still beautiful and upbeat. She's also nervous and emotionally armored. She is not sure how much information to disclose to this man she once loved and knew intimately.

Charlie had "frustrated her and eventually broke her heart." But after they finally divorced, she carried on with life. She became involved with a local mechanic and became pregnant with a daughter, Melissa, before they wed. The couple shared a rather staid, perfunctory marriage that endured great challenges; Viv was later widowed. Ensuing years left her to scrape by financially and share a ramshackle rental of a tiny house with her beloved daughter--now a single mom, "raising two young kids with no help from either of the fathers, and no savings or worldly possessions." While Vivian's life had become somewhat hardscrabble, her resilient, optimistic nature enabled her to appreciate that the richest rewards of her life were simple pleasures, centered on the close-knit bond shared with her nuclear family--however flawed.

From their first meeting, Charlie and Viv seem to pick up right where they left off, reminiscing about everything--their wedding, foods they used to enjoy, their regrets, their mistakes. Charlie disarms Viv by apologizing to her, outright, for the failure of their marriage. This admission leads them to share a passionate, evocative kiss. They quickly get swept up by the very best of what their romantic relationship once offered.

As the couple spends more time together, Viv falls under Charlie's spell of being impulsive, spontaneous, and fun. These qualities encourage her to trust him again. However, Viv soon learns how Charlie can still be smothering and overpowering, brooding and intense. And she makes it clear that her family is her top priority. The different ways they perceive and live life create conflict: self-sufficient and financially secure Charlie, enamored of the finer things of life, without kin, alone in the world; doting Vivian, pinching pennies and deeply enmeshed in the lives of her offspring. Butler probes how these differences challenge the dynamic of their relationship and their enduring love. 

Memory comes to serve both the good and the bad. Old wounds, vices, and destructive patterns of behavior--along with invisible scars and startling secrets that have the power to reveal vulnerabilities--eventually drive a wedge between Charlie and Viv and threaten the dreamy idealism of their reclaimed romance.

As exemplified in his other books, Butler's stellar storytelling vividly maps the foibles and redemptive nature of the human condition--and how the past informs the present and the future. In A Forty Year Kiss, he presents an unforgettable fictional exploration of second chance love. Beautifully crafted dual narration, perfect pacing and surprising plotting--along with likable, multi-faceted characters--will pierce the hearts and minds of readers who will become totally invested in deeply resonant themes of true love, family, and mortality. --Kathleen Gerard

Sourcebooks Landmark, $27.99, hardcover, 352p., 9781464221248, February 4, 2025

Sourcebooks Landmark: A Forty Year Kiss by Nickolas Butler


Nickolas Butler: Small Towns and Forgotten Places

Nickolas Butler
(photo: Jim Ivory)

Nickolas Butler, a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop, is the author of the internationally bestselling novel Shotgun Lovesongs and an acclaimed collection of short stories, Beneath the Bonfire. He's also the author of a three-generation contemporary epic The Hearts of Men; Little Faith, an exploration of religion and belief; and a literary thriller, Godspeed. A Forty Year Kiss, Butler's fifth novel, is a passionate, emotionally complex love story that reunites 60-something lovers after four decades. It will be published February 4, 2025, by Sourcebooks Landmark.

Curious... why is your name "Nickolas" spelled with a "k" as opposed to an "h"?

I have no idea why my folks spelled my name the way they did. My brother, Alex, and I are named after the Romanovs. Apparently, back in the late '70s, there was a TV mini-series about the Russian Imperial family, and I suppose my parents were quite taken by it.

Aha. So romantic sagas--ingrained in the womb--might explain why you dedicate A Forty Year Kiss (in part) to the late filmmaker Nora Ephron?

I grew up watching Ephron movies. They celebrated the literary and thoughtful. Her dialogue was smart and sexy. Genuine. And her characters felt like people I would want to hang out with. I can't tell you the number of times I've seen When Harry Met Sally. For me, it's this cinematic touchstone from a time when I was trying to teach myself what good writing sounded like and how to build rich, complete characters. 

That movie explored a lengthy time frame. Why a 40-year trajectory in A Forty Year Kiss?

There's certainly a lot at stake for the two lovers. They've spent four decades apart, and there won't be four decades in the future to spare. This builds an immediacy to the story.

So those 40 years dictated the shape of the novel?

Not immediately--the organization became clear through the writing. I knew I wanted to alternate points of view, and once I knew that, then I knew it wasn't any one character's story. This was a braided love story. Late in the editing process, I also realized that the novel could easily be organized into 40 chapters, echoing the title, and providing each of the main characters with equal narrative footing.

Did you draw from any other novels, love stories, to craft your own?

For many years, I kept encountering The Bridges of Madison County. I remember just picking up that novel one night and thinking, "Alright, what can I learn from this story?"

And the verdict?

It's a love story. But it's unconventional. Its form and organization are somewhat unexpected. It didn't just abide by a formula. I liked that.

Do you have a favorite literary love story?

The title that springs to mind is Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf. It isn't a typical romance, either. And Haruf was always so, so compassionate to his characters.

That idea of "compassion" calls to mind that you also dedicate this novel to singer/songwriter Tom Waits, "the heart of Saturday night."

Tom Waits is an extremely underrated writer of love songs--unexpectedly tender valentines. He has a knack for writing about small towns and forgotten places--the same geography that interests me. 

Midwest America.

Yes, I'm interested in landscape as a kind of character. And although I feel most at home writing about the Midwest (Wisconsin, in particular), I never want to be defined as strictly a writer who only writes about one place. I'm mostly interested in the plight of working-class characters.

You worked a host of jobs en route to achieving literary success. Do any stand out?

I liked being a coffee roaster--very romantic, sensual work; physically demanding. I traveled to Panama, Costa Rica, and El Salvador, visiting coffee farms, judging a contest, and meeting with farmers and mill workers. I've had a lot of strange work experiences, but all those experiences are reminders of what I have now, how good things are. I don't take my life for granted. 

There's a wonderful scene in the book where characters discuss making a list of the "Top Five Things I Want for My Life." What are your top five wants?

1. To witness the establishment of our two children in their adult lives, hopefully happily; 2. Give at least as much (but hopefully more) to the world as I have received; 3. See a whale from a close distance; 4. Continue writing until I can't anymore; 5. Spend my final decades traveling, camping, and exploring with my wife of almost 20 years. 

I truly hope those "wants" are granted. What's it been like, publishing six books?

I love what I do. Short of being the bullpen catcher for the Milwaukee Brewers or Minnesota Twins, I have my dream job, and I feel a tremendous amount of gratitude for the life I've built with my wife and family. I love writing. I love solving the problems that arise when crafting a novel. I like the deep focus. I like living a life that isn't really "normal." I don't go to an office. I don't really have a boss, or rather, I am my own boss. 

And what does "the boss" do after finishing a book?

I'm generally not very productive. And this lack of productivity gnaws at me until I hit a kind of rock-bottom. Basically, I get disgusted with myself, and then I launch into another period of hyper-productivity and focus.

Has the "hyper-productivity and focus" phase returned?

Well, I just experienced a very tumultuous, very unorthodox summer in which I ran for Wisconsin State Assembly, eventually losing in a Democratic primary. All just to say, my life is only now returning to some sense of normalcy. I was about hip-deep into a new novel before I undertook that campaign, so the work now is to go back to that manuscript and hopefully dive right back in. --Kathleen Gerard


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