What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
► UNSOLVED: One specific book
>
Fiction book about perils of progress.
date
newest »

My dad doesn't remember the book or even that he ever read us a novel. My siblings are equally unhelpful.
Lol...
Lol...

One other little detail is I think the wife's name was Eve or Eva.
Mindy--if you bump this up periodically you'll have a better chance of getting it found. It will stay fresh in our minds and new members will see it that way too.



Ditto! Someone could write an updated version along these lines with ipads, computers and cell phones!

Thanks so much for the title, though, Ayshe! Looks like a very cute book and I've added it to my TBR.




Yes, exactly. Well, and also because I'm a completist, and I want that GoodReads should have ALL THE THINGS!

Yeah, somebody needs to edit the topic title to remove SOLVED and move it out of the "solved" folder. I don't know how to do that, unfortunately :(

There should be "edit" near the topic's title (on the desktop site at least), visible only to Mindy and mods, I think, from there.






Thanks again, Ayshe! At least we're getting closer.
Mindy

Oh that's OK - it's still an interesting book. Discovering new books is never a waste of time :)
Books mentioned in this topic
Magnificent Dishonor (other topics)Element 79 (other topics)
Magnificent Dishonor (other topics)
Father's Big Improvements (other topics)
The story starts with a description of a family living in days when most people didn't have cars. They would ride to church in their horse-pulled wagon and count the prairie dog holes along the way. At some point, the family gets its first car and things start to fall apart. They go too fast to be able to count the prairie dog holes. The husband and wife never see each other face to face anymore and begin communicating entirely by notes. As time goes on, they purchase other modern conveniences, which also don't work out well. The theme of the book is definitely that progress corrupts. It is narrated in third person from the father's perspective. He thinks he is the only one who is unhappy, and often says or thinks that he doesn't want to deprive his family of the good things in life.
Any ideas of what this might be? I've been looking for it for a few years. My dad doesn't remember the book or even that he ever read us a novel. My siblings are equally unhelpful.
Thanks