Sunday, March 31, 2013
Chronicles: Volume One
The world has Woody Guthrie and Robert Johnson to thank for Bob Dylan, to judge from the singer's frank and entertaining autobiography. The account slips back and forth in time effectively, starting out in New York in 1961, scrolling back to Minnesota, flashing forward to miserable years in Woodstock and a middle section devoted entirely to the recording of a single album in the 1980s, and wrapping up with a return to the early 1960s with the singer on the cusp of fame. Dylan never lets the reader get too close. He's all business when it comes to music, soaking up influences and techniques like a sponge. His personal life is treated at a remove. To hear him tell it, all he wanted to do was take care of his family; the "voice of a generation" stuff never made sense to him. His favorite politician was Barry Goldwater because he reminded him of Tom Mix. An odd man with a plan.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Tula Station
The ingredients of Latin American literature — multiple narrators, time shifts, impossible love — are here in spades. For good measure, the Mexican novelist David Toscana adds the "found manuscript" device. The result feels too much like a pastiche to leave a lasting impression, although there are effective and sly touches throughout Tula Station.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Fatherland
Robert Harris appears to be a can't-miss writer. His Pompeii, The Fear Index, and Cicero novels are entertaining and historically intelligent. This is his first novel, an alternate-history speculation in which the Nazis were not defeated in World War II. Suspenseful and seemingly effortlessly written, Fatherland follows a Berlin police detective investigating the death of a retired high-ranking Nazi. It's 1964 and President Kennedy is in the White House: Joseph Kennedy, John's father. Germany is preparing to celebrate Hitler's 75th birthday. Harris carries it all off with elan.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Pym
Mat Johnson's novel, a mixture of fantasy, social commentary, and literary detective work, begins promisingly but begins to wheeze about halfway through. It was a chore to finish. Fantasy must be believable to be effective literature, and too often Pym comes off as half-baked. Fiction is not true, but neither can it be false.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
The Move
This Georges Simenon novel, from late in his career (1967), has a smutty feel to it. It hides what it believes to be dirty behind what amounts to a wall with a peep hole. It is the story of a man in his 30s who moves with his wife and teenage son out of Paris to a new housing development. In his bedroom, while his wife is sleeping, he hears through the wall the sexual exploits of a couple in the next apartment. This topples him off his perch of middle class respectability, into a downward spiral that eventually brings him to question the very value of societal norms. Halfway through this brisk, 148-page novel, I read a People magazine piece from 1980 in which Simenon claimed to have slept with 10,000 women. That made this novel a little easier to understand, though no pleasanter.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Serenade
James M. Cain (1892-1977) is best known for his novels The Postman Always Rings Twice and Double Indemnity, which were made into films. Serenade, also made into a film, is a lesser-known book published in 1937 that taps into Cain's interest in music and singing. The plot is about as wild as could be imagined: washed-up opera singer lands in Mexico, meets a prostitute, agrees to go to Acalpulco to help her manage a brothel, gets stuck in an empty church during a thunderstorm, miraculously recovers his voice, smuggles the prostitute to Los Angeles on a freighter captained by an opera-loving Irishman, becomes a movie star, and ... that's just the half of it. There's not much violence, but the hard-boiled label still fits because of Cain's frank, for the time, approach to sex. There is a world-weary directness throughout that is very appealing, and as a stylist Cain hits the bull's-eye.
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