Home of the American Circus

A Novel

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About The Book

The acclaimed author of the “lyrical coming-of-age novel” (Good Morning America) The People We Keep returns with a luminous contemporary women’s fiction story about strong female characters, family estrangement, found family, and the transformative power of redemption.

It’s been ten years since Freya Arnalds left a goodbye note on her parents’ kitchen table and fled her hometown of Somers, New York, driving up the coast to disappear into a lackluster life as a bartender in Maine. But, on the cusp of her thirtieth birthday, when an emergency leaves her short on rent, Freya returns to Somers to live in the derelict house she inherited after her parents’ untimely death, and soon discovers that her fifteen-year-old niece, Aubrey, is secretly living there.

Despite all attempts to lay low in her old town, Freya reunites with childhood friends, encounters familial enemies, and stokes old flames while she fights to stay afloat and give her niece a better life than the one she’s had. As they reconnect, Freya and Aubrey learn to 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 examines the mythology of a broken family, the weight of the past, and the complicated journey of finding home.

Reading Group Guide

Home of the American Circus Reading Group Guide

By Leighellen Landscov of Momma Leighellen’s Book Nook and Book Friends Book Club

In the Beginning

What was your first impression of Freya? What was your initial reaction to her choice to return home? Did either of those ideas shift as the novel went on? Why?

The House as Metaphor

The house Freya inherits is falling apart and full of painful memories. In what ways does the physical state of the house mirror Freya’s life and relationships? How does the book help broaden or redefine your idea of “home”?

Memory, Trauma, and Nonlinear Narrative

The novel is told through multiple points of view, and Larkin moves back and forth in time, through past memories and events. How does this nonlinear structure affect your reading experience and your understanding of Freya’s trauma and healing? Did it ever feel disorienting? Why do you think the author chose this structure?

Legacy, Inheritance, and Generational Wounds

Freya, Jam, Steena, and Aubrey all inherit different kinds of “legacies.” How do you see generational trauma playing out in their relationships? Which characters succeed in breaking cycles, and which are bound by them?

The Role of Place and Local Myth

Woven throughout the novel’s chapters are tales of the history of Somers, New York, involving the lore of the American circus and Old Bet, the famed elephant. Had you ever heard of Old Bet? Why or why not? How do the historical snippets mirror the journeys of the novel’s characters and their stories?

The Bond Between Freya and Aubrey

“Kids don’t need a life where nothing bad happens. What they need is someone who’s there for them WHEN the bad stuff happens.” Explore the relationship between Freya and Aubrey. Was it healthy? What scenes or interactions did you find most pivotal? Were there times you found yourself rooting for one more than the other? Why?

Steena, Villain or Victim

Steena is a difficult and often antagonistic presence, yet Larkin gives her complexity. How do you interpret Steena’s motivations as a mother and sister? Is she a villain, a victim, or both?

Jam, History or Future?

“I delight in being known.” How do you feel about Freya and Jam’s relationship? Is it empowering or enabling? Could they ever have a future?

Silence and Voice

Many characters in the novel hide painful experiences (abuse, neglect, estrangement). Does silence or omission do more harm than good? How might the story have shifted if certain truths had been revealed sooner?

Love and Found Family

Discuss the way the novel explores love in all forms - familial, parental, sibling, self, even the love within a community. How does the idea of “chosen family” contrast with biological family in this novel? How is it expressed in both healthy and harmful ways?

Redemption in Small Acts

Throughout the novel, the characters experience love and loss. How does the novel depict and define redemption? What are some acts of redemption (big or small) that occur throughout the story, including Bet’s journey? Which felt the most redemptive or meaningful to you?

The Ending and New Beginnings

The novel ends with Freya and Aubrey leaving Somers to hike the Appalachian Trail. What was your reaction to this ending? Do you see it more as an escape, a healing gesture, or a step towards something new? What do you think is next for them?

About The Author

Photograph by Helenna Santos
Allison Larkin

Allison Larkin is the internationally bestselling author of the novels The People We KeepStayWhy Can’t I Be You, and Swimming for Sunlight. Her short fiction has been published in The Summerset Review and Slice, and nonfiction in Author in Progress, a how-to guide from Writer’s Digest Books, and the dog anthology I’m Not the Biggest Bitch in This Relationship. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, Jeremy, and their rescue dog, Roxy.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Gallery Books (May 5, 2026)
  • Length: 448 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668008423

Raves and Reviews

"Allison Larkin...just keeps raising the bar on her own peerless talent. Home of the American Circus is a character study wrapped in wit and deep-fried in emotional resilience, sprinkled with Larkin's trademark gutting human insight. If anyone is still searching for The Great American Novel, I humbly suggest this may be it." —Parade

"Another masterful portrait of found family from Allison Larkin, who always lets the good hearts of her characters shine through." —Book Riot

“This powerful story of emotional healing and chosen family will resonate with readers who enjoyed Ann Napolitano’s Hello Beautiful.” —Booklist

“Allison Larkin follows up her warmhearted The People We Keep with another moving, unputdownable book . . . As in all of Larkin’s books, the characters in Home of the American Circus feel fully alive with quirks and characteristics that cause them trouble, but readers still want to hang out with them for a few hundred pages, if not longer.” —Bay City News
 
“[A] naturally flowing up-and-down journey that basks in beautiful moments like a slice-of-life story. Whether it’s banter at the bar Freya’s working or a leaking roof that is simply one more thing than she can possibly handle right now, the characters and their experiences are so real and pure that their joys and sorrows are amplified tenfold.” —Associated Press (AP)
 
“Home follows you wherever you go, for better or for worse—and no book explores this notion better than Home of the American Circus . . . one of those books that you never want to end. I savored every detail of this story, from its gorgeous prose and meaningful relationships to its redemptive, riveting storyline. Run away and read Home of the American Circus! You won’t be disappointed.” —Book of the Month

“Charming...Larkin explores with tenderness and nuance the strong yet complicated relationship between her protagonists, and successfully uses the details of home repair as a metaphor for the rebuilding of Freya’s and Aubrey’s lives. It’s a cozy tale of new beginnings.”Publishers Weekly

"Larkin skillfully blends contemporary realism with historical footnotes about Somers' legacy as the birthplace of the American circus. The result is an elegant meditation on generational repair, full of small surprises and deep feeling. It's a novel that trusts the reader to listen closely--and rewards them for it. Larkin writes with humor, heart and an understanding of relationships and identity, often centering women finding their voice or reclaiming their place in the world. She balances wit and vulnerability, avoiding cynicism while still acknowledging life's messiness." --Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Home of the American Circus is filled with that particular ‘Larkinesque’ honesty and heart. I loved spending time in Somers, NY with the novel’s rich characters and their complex lives. And Freya, the heroine, is so compelling I found myself thinking of her long after I finished reading. Allie Larkin proves yet again why she’s one of my favorite writers, and I absolutely loved this gripping, beautiful, big-hearted novel.” —Renee Swindle, author of Shake Down the Stars

"Welcome to Somers, New York, the birthplace of the American circus — where Freya Arnald reluctantly returns to the falling-down home she inherited from her parents, to dig a future for herself and her niece out from her troubled past. Larkin’s hauntingly gorgeous story of family secrets, shame, and redemption will warm hearts and inspire hope." — Meg Waite Clayton, New York Times bestselling author of The Postmistress of Paris

"In Home of the American Circus, Allie Larkin illuminates the other Gen X we haven't seen in movies and books: the quiet, thoughtful, uncertain kids who grew into adults waiting for their moment. This book is a brilliant study of small-town life and the cautious wants of a broken heart. You will not be able to forget any of the characters, human or elephant.”  —Ethan Joella, author of The Same Bright Stars 

"A tender and heartbreaking exploration of what it's like to come crawling back to a home you once fled. Amid her keen observations on life in small towns, Larkin shows us the crushing despair of failure and the fearlessness it brings. You will come away from this book changed, eyes bleary with nostalgia and hope for the future." —Bryn Greenwood, New York Times bestselling author of All the Ugly and Wonderful Things

“Told with compassion, humor, and honesty, Allison Larkin’s stunning Home of the American Circus is a poignant tale of estrangement, redefining family, reckoning with the past, and healing through challenging but ultimately empowering circumstances. Readers will fall in love with Larkin’s cast of vivid characters and won’t want to say goodbye at the end of the book.” —Cassandra Dunn, author of The Art of Adapting 

“In her new novel, Home of the American Circus, Allison Larkin has given us a main character so real, so genuine, so alive that we feel we’ve known her forever. Freya and her family and friends are clearly imagined, sharply drawn, and very much worth spending your time with.” —Jon Clinch, author of Marley and The General and Julia

"Allison Larkin has penned another beautiful story in Home of the American Circus, illuminating universal truths about returning home and the impact of family. Freya feels as authentic as your own friend, and you will cheer as she works to reclaim her life in the face of loss and personal challenge." —Shilpi Somaya Gowda, New York Times bestselling author of A Great Country

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