Home of the American Circus

Home of the American Circus

Allison Larkin

Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

The acclaimed author of the “lyrical coming-of-age novel” (Good Morning America) The People We Keep returns with a luminous new story of redemption, breaking generational curses, and the power of family in its truest form. After an emergency leaves her short on rent, thirty-year-old Freya Arnalds bails on her lackluster life as bartender in Maine and returns to her suburban hometown of Somers, New York, to live in the house she inherited from her estranged parents. Despite attempts to lay low, Freya encounters childhood friends, familial enemies, and old flames—as well as her fifteen-year-old niece, Aubrey, who is secretly living in the derelict home. As they reconnect, Freya and Aubrey lean on each other, working to restore the house and come to terms with the devastating events that pulled them apart years ago. Set in the birthplace of the American circus, this deeply moving novel is an exploration of broken families, the weight of the past, and the complicated journey of finding home.


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  • bookgang
    Mar 30, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

     
    Thank you to Gallery Books for the advanced copy of this novel. Home of the American Circus will hit store shelves on May 6th. 

    Allison Larkin shared with me that Home of the American Circus is the book she is most proud of, and it's easy to see why. Her heart is on every page of this 432-page family drama, vividly capturing the author's hometown of Somers, New York- a place rich in history as the birthplace of the American circus. This town's status symbol becomes the author's cornerstone for a story filled with reinvention and, perhaps, a bit of reinterpretation that echoes her character's transformative journeys.

    After a financial emergency, Freya reluctantly returns to the crumbling house she inherited from her estranged parents. What begins as a hesitant homecoming transforms into an emotional excavation of her past as she confronts the ghosts of broken friendships, familial betrayals, and unresolved love. But it is her discovery of Aubrey, her fifteen-year-old niece secretly living in the neglected family home, who brings Freya's journey into sharp focus as she tries to make up for what she missed when she was gone.

    Larkin takes her time unraveling the mystery behind Freya's departure, offering heartwrenching snapshots of emotional abuse and neglect from her childhood. These past emotional blows are met with respite as the present timeline becomes filled with vibrant side characters, a cozy restaurant setting where unlikely people and food pairings find each other, romances blossom, and a found family emerges for Freya that the reader can delight in.  

    Sometimes, the home is its own character in our stories, and in this novel, it offers readers a powerful symbol—weathered, damaged, and yet capable of being rebuilt—just like us, even when we feel beyond the grasp of repair.

    Fans of character-driven novels will have much to love in this ambitious novel, and I can't wait to host Allison on the Book Gang podcast to learn more about the writing process for this beautiful book. 


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