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The Float Test

A Novel

ebook
0 of 2 copies available
Wait time: About 12 weeks
0 of 2 copies available
Wait time: About 12 weeks

From Lynn Steger Strong, critically acclaimed author of Flight, a sophisticated and layered novel about sisters, betrayal, love, and climate change, for readers of The Dutch House and The Most Fun We Ever Had.

"With surgical precision, Lynn Steger Strong dissects and then elegantly reconstructs an American family on the brink: of falling apart, of finding themselves, of saying all the things left unsaid. From the collateral damage inevitably caused by artists, to the notion that perhaps we are who we always were, Strong's clear and confident voice and prose makes the unvarnished truths in this book sting. But that same quality makes the moments of profound tenderness and humanity linger. The Float Test—and the Floridian world of this clan—will stay with me for a long time to come."

Xochitl Gonzalez, New York Times bestselling author of Anita de Monte Laughs Last

"What I loved most about The Float Test is the sense of place, and how the sticky, dense heat of Florida, the relentless sun, the flat roads ending at the ocean, is woven into the Kenner family's DNA. The adult children of the family—all at crisis points in their own lives—gather on the hot ground of their childhood following their mother's death, where they try to untangle decades of betrayals and sorrow, and reclaim their sense of home."

Ann Napolitano, New York Times bestselling author of Hello Beautiful

The Kenner siblings are at odds. Jenn is a harried mom struggling under the weight of family obligations. Fred is a novelist who can't write, maybe because she's lost faith in storytelling itself. Jude is a recovering corporate lawyer with her own story to tell, and a grudge against her former favorite sister, Fred. George, the baby, is estranged from his wife and harboring both a secret about his former employer and an ill-advised crush on one of his sisters' friends. Gathered after a major loss, each sibling needs the others more than ever—if only they could trust each other.

A family story is, of course, only as honest as the person telling it. This family story in particular is fraught with secrets about kids and sex and jobs and why the Kenner matriarch had a gun in her underwear drawer. The biggest secret of all though is the secret of what happened between Jude and Fred to create such a rift between the two once-close middle sisters. Over the course of a sweltering Florida summer, the Kenner siblings will revisit what it means to be a family and, if they are smart and kind and lucky, come out on the other side better for having each other.

A rich exploration of family, ambition, secrets, and love, The Float Test is an elegant and gripping testament to the power that family has to both nurture and destroy us from a critically acclaimed writer working at the top of her craft.

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    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2024

      After a major loss, the Kenner siblings reunite. Jenn is an overwhelmed mom, Fred a novelist with writer's block, Jude a former lawyer (with a grudge against her sister Fred), while George is estranged from his wife. Together they must overcome the secrets and betrayals that have pushed them apart. Strong's (Flight) latest receives a 100K-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2025
      In the wake of their mother's death, a Florida family regroups. Strong's fourth novel, set over two recent summer months in a wealthy area of Florida, is defined by an unusual decision: The third-oldest of the four Kenner siblings, Jude, is its omniscient narrator. At one point, there is a parenthetical acknowledgement of how weird this is: "A lot of what I'm saying here I found out later; the rest, as Fred would say, I'veimagined my way into, because why not." The reason Fred, short for Winnifred, would say this is that she, the second child, is the writer in the family, and her published books have been the source of difficulty and estrangement. With the story she tells here, Jude is effectively taking back the narrative, describing Fred's (and everyone else's) experiences in Florida so intimately that one has to keep reminding oneself that this is Jude's story and trying to recall which woman goes with which husband or ex-husband, etc., and that Jude is largely offstage in New York. As the novel opens, the children's mother has had a stroke while running and died two days later. Jude and her youngest sibling, George, come to town for the funeral; George remains at their parents' house for the rest of the novel. One of the things Jude "found out later" is why he didn't want to go home to Houston. Another such thing is that at the "party that was not a party" after the funeral, Fred found a gun in their mother's dresser drawer. The story of this gun, both in the past and the present, is the closest thing the novel has to a throughline, and the suspicion that it must at some point be discharged proves true. Every one of the many characters, including the dead mother, has backstories and subplots and friends and associates. Threaded through it all is bad news about the Floridian landscape and climate that plays little role in the plot. An abundance of good writing and interesting storylines and environmental information, but not much to tie it together.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2025
      Strong (Flight, 2022) maintains her position as queen of the quietly devastating novel with her latest offering. The Kenner siblings are struggling. Jenn is drowning under her familial obligations. Fred is a writer who can't write. George is caught between a cheating wife and a dishonest boss. And Judith, our narrator, is losing on two fronts, motherhood and her career. Brought together by their mother's sudden death, the Kenners could lean on each other if only they could exhume and examine the secrets and lies that have torn them apart. Strong is very adept at extracting and considering the minute details that create and destroy relationships. The setting in a humid Florida summer increases the tension. Then add Judith as an unreliable narrator, and readers are gifted with a kind of literary puzzle in which one has the task of untangling the highs and lows of each relationship to determine where it all went wrong for this family. The Float Test is a novel readers will become fully engaged with.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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