RUN FOR THE HILLS

Madeline Hill finds her life exhausting, but mostly plentiful, having built her family’s little organic farm in Tennessee into a destination for foodies and families alike. But the chip on her shoulder comes rushing back when her half brother Reuben shows up in a PT Cruiser with a trunkful of family secrets about her deadbeat dad, Chuck Hill. Not the least of these is the fact that their father created and abandoned families four times in total, leaving behind kids who each followed in their father’s largely invented footsteps. Despite her reservations, Mad joins her brother—a sensitive, middle-aged crime writer who followed the path set by his dad, known as Charles Hill—on his ill-advised quest. In Oklahoma, they pick up their father’s other spitfire daughter, Pep, a championship basketball player raised by coach Chip Hill to never give up. Meanwhile, in Salt Lake City, they pick up Theron, called Tom, the 11-year-old son of a famous TV broadcaster mother, fathered by cameraman Carl Hill. Wilson’s quartet makes for an amiable if fairly milquetoast bunch, but their awkward bonding leans toward cringe rather than comfort. They finally do find their absentee father out West, but it’s more realization than revelation, mostly about the frailty of man and what it means to be a family. Wilson is positively masterful at quirky family dramas and many of the ingredients that have made his stories so popular are present here: an eclectic cast, a dash of absurdity, and complicated but very real family dynamics. Somewhere in his latest, though, some spice got missed and readers end up on a road to nowhere. “We’ve had our big family fight and now we’ve made up,” Pep says on the road. “That’s how it works, I think.”

May 13, 2025 - 05:22
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RUN FOR THE HILLS
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Madeline Hill finds her life exhausting, but mostly plentiful, having built her family’s little organic farm in Tennessee into a destination for foodies and families alike. But the chip on her shoulder comes rushing back when her half brother Reuben shows up in a PT Cruiser with a trunkful of family secrets about her deadbeat dad, Chuck Hill. Not the least of these is the fact that their father created and abandoned families four times in total, leaving behind kids who each followed in their father’s largely invented footsteps. Despite her reservations, Mad joins her brother—a sensitive, middle-aged crime writer who followed the path set by his dad, known as Charles Hill—on his ill-advised quest. In Oklahoma, they pick up their father’s other spitfire daughter, Pep, a championship basketball player raised by coach Chip Hill to never give up. Meanwhile, in Salt Lake City, they pick up Theron, called Tom, the 11-year-old son of a famous TV broadcaster mother, fathered by cameraman Carl Hill. Wilson’s quartet makes for an amiable if fairly milquetoast bunch, but their awkward bonding leans toward cringe rather than comfort. They finally do find their absentee father out West, but it’s more realization than revelation, mostly about the frailty of man and what it means to be a family. Wilson is positively masterful at quirky family dramas and many of the ingredients that have made his stories so popular are present here: an eclectic cast, a dash of absurdity, and complicated but very real family dynamics. Somewhere in his latest, though, some spice got missed and readers end up on a road to nowhere. “We’ve had our big family fight and now we’ve made up,” Pep says on the road. “That’s how it works, I think.”