Category: the-art-of-narrative

  • Making Up for Lost Time
    Justine book one of the Alexandria Quartet by Lawrence Durrell.  Faber.  884 pp.  $16.99 I’ve always been a book snob and have never read things when everyone else did.  I didn’t read The Way of Zen—which changed my life—until my late thirties, though everyone else I knew read it in college.  I read my wife’s copy, ...
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  • Flashing Through Time
    Warlight, a novel by Michael Ondaatje.  Vintage.  285 pp.  $16.95. ***** The Cat’s Table a novel by Michael Ondaatje.  Vintage.  265 pp.  $15.95. ***** I spent the early weeks of my self-isolation reading Michael Ondaatje.  First his latest novel, Warlight, which was a gift from a friend.  While I was reading and admiring that, she mentioned that ...
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  • End of the Line
    The Road by John Ehle.  University of Tennessee Press.  401 pp.  **** I wanted to read the first novel in John Ehle’s mountain series because it’s set in a place I often inhabit (and where I am self-isolating during the pandemic) and because I knew Ehle to be a skillful writer, having reviewed one of his ...
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  • In Recovery
    The Largesse of the Sea Maiden stories by Denis Johnson.  Random House.  207 pp. $17.00. ***1/2 One thing I wonder about people in recovery—especially writers in recovery—is why they have an endless fascination with their period of addiction.  It’s the same way people at AA get together and tell stories of their worst fuck-ups.  “You think ...
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  • Mea Culpa
    The Land Breakers by John Ehle.  New York Review Books.  345 pp $17.95 ***** For six years after my undergraduate career at Duke I lived in Winston-Salem, where I taught at a secondary school and spent every spare moment writing, at first just during vacations, then—beginning in my third year—getting up at 4:50 to write before ...
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  • Portrait of the Artist as a Young Hasid
    My Name Is Asher Lev a novel by Chaim Potok.  Anchor Books. 369 pp. $15.95. **** When I was looking through Goodreads trying to decide if I wanted to read another Chaim Potok novel, I came across a reviewer who said—about this book, I believe—“Chaim Potok refuses to write a page turner.”  I thought that an ...
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  • Who’s the Killer Now?
    Clemency a film by Chinonye Chukwu.  With Alfre Woodard, Aldis Hodge, Wendell Pierce, Richard Schiff.  ***** Clemency is a movie about the brutality of the death penalty.  Reviewers have seen it as a character study of the female warden (Alfre Woodard) who carries the penalty out, but it’s much more than that; it takes in the ...
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  • It Happened in Lisbon
    Like a Fading Shadow a novel by Antonio Munoz Molina.  Picador.  312 pp.  ****1/2 In 2013, Spanish novelist Antonio Munoz Molina traveled to Lisbon to help his son—who was living there as a freelancer—celebrate his 26th birthday.  That marked a return to the city for Munoz Molina; he had gone there in 1987, when his son ...
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  • Happier Simpler Time?
    Little Women a film by Greta Gerwig.  With Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Eliza Scanlen, Laura Dern, Meryl Streep. **** I’ll start by admitting that, unlike every woman I’ve spoken to about it, I didn’t read the book.  A boy reading such a book in my day—the late fifties and early sixties—would have been weird.  ...
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  • What Violence Begets
    Queen and Slim a film by Melina Matsoukas.  With Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Turner-Smith, Bokeem Woodbine.  Written by Lena Waithe  ***** This is a stupendous movie, another absolute must see, by a group of people I hadn’t encountered before (which may be a failing on my part).  The acting, directing, and cinematography are all marvelous, but the ...
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  • Family Reunion
    The Irishman a film by Martin Scorsese.  With Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, Anna Paquin, Ray Romano.  ***** Toward the end of The Irishman, the former union boss and mobster Frank Sheeran (Robert DeNiro) is looking through some photos in a nursing home while a nurse takes his blood pressure.  He asks her if she knows ...
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  • Master and Disciple
    The Gift of Rain a novel by Tan Twan Eng.  Weinstein Books.  432 pp.  $16.99.  **** The Gift of Rain is one of the most affecting novels I’ve read in years; toward the end I was both riveted to and deeply disturbed by what I was reading, so that I could hardly sleep.  This is Tan ...
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  • Poverty Has a Smell
    Parasite a film by Bong Joon Ho.  With Kang-ho Song, Sun-kyun Lee, Yeo-jeung Jo, Woi-six Choi.  ***** Parasite is a movie about the vast gap in wealth that exists in the world today.  It takes place in South Korea, but could take place any number of places, including this country.  It begins as a whimsical comedy, ...
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  • She’s Trapped But Her Voice Is Free
    Milkman a novel by Anna Burns.  Graywolf Press.  348 pp.  $16.00 ****1/2 Milkman is simultaneously one of the most terrifying and hilarious novels in recent memory.  It’s terrifying because it portrays a society where the two sides are locked in such mortal combat that people have become dreadfully paranoid; to express a shred of compassion for ...
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  • Young Man with a Horn
    A Good Day to Die a novel by Jim Harrison.  A Delta Book.  176 pp. $7.95 (in 1973) ** It’s startling to realize that, after a first novel that was the semi-autobiographical and rather random ruminations of a poet who loved the natural world, Jim Harrison, with A Good Day to Die, suddenly became a novelist.  ...
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  • We’re the Understory
    The Overstory a novel by Richard Powers.  Norton.  502 pp.  $18.95 The Overstory is nothing if not ambitious.  It begins by introducing nine characters in brief vignettes, summing up their lives to a certain point; each of these characters, we have a feeling, could inhabit a novel of their own.  The one thing they have in ...
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  • Present at the Creation
    Wolf: A False Memoir by Jim Harrison.  Delta.  225 pp. Having just made my way chronologically through the novels of Toni Morrison—an experience I’m still digesting—it occurred to me that I might do the same with Jim Harrison.  I once wrote, “I sometimes think I could sit down and read through his entire oeuvre, all thirty ...
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  • Too Close to Home
    Emily, Alone a novel by Stewart O’Nan.  Penguin Books. 255 pp. $17.00 I picked up this book because a friend of my brother told him it was set in “our Pittsburgh.”  I couldn’t believe the extent to which that is true.  The aging widow Emily Maxwell does not live quite in my neighborhood, but close enough, ...
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  • Closing the Book
    Home a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  145 pp. $14.95 *** God Help the Child a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  178 pp.  $14.95 *** Last April, having seen Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, I resolved to read all of her novels, in order of composition.  It’s taken a ...
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  • Good Could Have Been Great
    My Year of Dirt and Water: Journal of a Zen Monk’s Wife in Japan by Tracy Franz.  Stone Bridge Press.  306 pp. $16.95.  ***1/2 I don’t believe in publishing pages from a journal.  I’m all for keeping a journal (Thoreau is one of my heroes); it’s an invaluable practice to sit down every day and review ...
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