Tuesday, July 28, 2015

The Grand Banks Cafe

This Maigret story, like others in the series by Georges Simenon, excels in its understanding of human impulses, desires, and fears. The mystery here is solved, cleverly enough, but the heart of the story is the excavation of the characters' flaws. Through it all Maigret sips on his beer and puffs on his pipe, seeing everything and judging nothing.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Gut

Giulia Enders's Gut explains the digestive system and ranks its importance on a par with the circulatory and nervous systems. If the gut continues to be "underrated," as the subtitle maintains, it won't be her fault.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Sweet Tooth

Tedious, arid, and unconvincing are the words that come to mind as the reader trudges through the nearly 400 pages of Ian McEwan's Sweet Tooth. Writing about an attractive woman in her early 20s in the first person must have been done on a dare; even at a remove, McEwan couldn't vivify such a person in prose to save his life. And his sex scenes are as awful as ever. No steak; not even any sizzle.

Monday, July 20, 2015

Haunch Paunch and Jowl

Samuel Orntiz's novel captures the pageant of immigrant life in the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the years straddling the turn of the 20th century. The Jewish experience is presented in vivid detail by the ambitious and clever narrator, Meyer Hirsch. Starting off as a boy in a street gang, Hirsch ascends the ladder of power through all means open to him, legitimate and otherwise, to eventually become the caricatured bigwig of the title. A stream of consciousness device is used sparingly and effectively as Ornitz's characters confront the issues of poverty, politics, religion and love.

About a half-century later Mordecai Richler would mine this same vein, but in Montreal, in The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz. Haunch Paunch and Jowl is a worthy ancestor.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Go Set a Watchman

This novel by Harper Lee succeeds on many levels, which makes the largely negative reaction it has received puzzling. It may be that by taking the "tin god" of Atticus Finch, as one character refers to him, down to earth, the book has committed a crime equivalent of telling a five-year-old that there is no Santa Claus. Jean Louise "Scout" Finch, who had "barnacled" her morality to her father's, gets a rude awakening on a trip home from New York when she learns that he attends white racists' meetings and thinks blacks are too primitive for self-government. This Finch, paradoxically, is consistent with the one in Mockingbird because that story was set in the 1930s, a time when blacks posed no threat to white power and he could magnanimously defend an obviously innocent man without fear of wider consequences. This story takes place in the 1950s after the Brown v. Board of Education decision, which poses a very real threat to the kind of society that Finch wants to protect. Beyond the racial elements, there is a good deal of gentle humor, especially in Jean Louise's flashbacks to her childhood and adolescence. 

Sunday, July 12, 2015

The Big Money

The concluding volume of John Dos Passos's U.S.A. is a heartbreaking, panoramic portrait of America in the 1920s. The striving characters are blunted at nearly every turn, and even their successes contain the seeds of future failure. The high point is the Camera Eye chapter on the Sacco and Vanzetti case with its declaration that "all right we are two nations." A great novel never loses relevance; The Big Money meets that standard.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Finders Keepers

Although this second installment in a planned trilogy by Stephen King is an improvement over the first, the parade of cliches and tin-eared dialogue marks it as a true sibling to Mr. Mercedes. On page 268, the reader finds: "A week from now, all this will be over, he tells himself. The thought brings him some comfort," and thinks: "One-hundred and sixty-three pages from now, all this will be over. The thought brings him some comfort."

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