As fine a novel as Louise Erdrich has ever written, LaRose grabs its readers from page one and never lets go. Landreaux Iron is hunting deer and accidentally shoots and kills his neighbor’s son, Dusty, who is the youngest child of his wife’s half sister. According to Ojibwe law, Iron must hand over his youngest child, LaRose, to Dusty’s parents. Thus begins the saga of the Iron and Ravich families. Erdrich moves back and forth in time, beginning with the first LaRose five generations back and ending in present day North Dakota. LaRose has well-drawn characters, and a plot with some realistically written tense moments. I believe the author ended this novel with the possibility of a sequel. I sure hope so.
Zero K by Don DeLillo 274 pages
Weird, ominous, uncomfortable and philosophical are just a few of the adjectives to describe DeLillo’s latest novel. The story begins when Jeffrey Lockhard, the narrator, is traveling to visit his father, Ross, and step mother, Artis, ocalled a remote, desert-like location somewhere in the Mideast. The building he spends his time at is named The Convergence, and is actually a place where people are frozen and then brought back to life when our world becomes more welcoming. Artis, who is quite ill, is about to undergo
Everybody’s Fool by Richard Russo 485 pages
Russo has done it again-written a laugh-out-loud novel with well drawn characters and a page turner plot. Everybody’s Fool, like Nobody’s Fool, takes place in North Bath, New York with basically the same comedic misfits. It is not necessary to read Nobody’s before reading Russo’s newest, but I guarantee you will want to read it after meeting Sully, Raymer and a host of others.
For the most part, the book takes place during a forty-eight hour period on a sweltering Memorial Day Weekend in North Bath. In those two days, a deadly cobra is on the loose, the sheriff has fainted and fallen into a newly dug grave, lightening has struck along with a number of other calamities. If you’re in the mood to do a lot of smiling, pick up a copy of Everybody’s Fool.
Father’s Day by Simon Van Booy 284 pages
Van Booy’s last book, The Illusion of Separateness, was a good read-well-written with a great “aha” moment; however, the same can’t be said for his most recent work. A six year old girl named Harvey is adopted by her Uncle Jason, an ex con with a violent temper, after her parents are both killed in a car accident. Fast forward twenty years, and Harvey is a successful illustrator living in Paris. Jason comes to visit the week of Father’s Day, and each day Harvey presents him with a gift that is a symbol of an incident in in their past.
I found the plot, characters and “aha” moment in Father’s Day disappointing. For me, the story line was not engaging, the characters had no depth, and the aha moment was predictable.
City of Secrets by Stewart O’Nan 190 pages
In O’Nan’s sixteenth novel, main character, Brand aka Jossi Jorgenson, is a cab driver in Jerusalem shortly after World War II. Born in Riga and the only member of his family to survive the the war, Brand now works for the Jewish underground. In his old Peugeot, he drives tourists from the old city to The King David Hotel, but also drives the getaway car that bombs British trains and buildings. He still mourns his wife, Katya, who died in a concentration camp, yet he has fallen in love with Eva, also a survivor and member of the underground. Written in terse prose, City of Secrets is a love story, historical fiction , a novel about moral dilemmas and for anyone who has been to Jerusalem, a chance to revisit some of its famous sights.
A Life Apar wat by Neel Mukherjee vividpages
Neel Mukherjee’s second novel, The Lives of Others, was a great family saga short-listed for The Man Booker Prize. A Life Apart is actually his debut novel, but it was not published in this country until after The Lives of Others. One can see signs of the excellent writer Mukherjee will become here.
Ritwik is a gay orphan raised by a brutal mother in Calcutta. He attends college in England on a scholarship and decides to stay on after graduation even though his student visa has run out and he doesn’t have a green card. He lives rent free, taking care of an elderly woman and makes his spending money doing odd menial jobs and prostituting. In his spare time, Ritwik is writing a novel about an English woman living in India in the early 1900’s.
The story within a story is more a diversion than a parallel experience. One is waiting for both stories to come together and they never do. There are sections in A Life Apart Continue reading “A Life Apar wat by Neel Mukherjee vividpages”
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates 152 pages
In a letter to his son, Coates describes his life growing up in Baltimore, attending Howard University, marrying and fathering a son, and living and writing in New York City. However, that is only the bare bones of this epistle. This heart felt work of nonfiction is really the plight of the black man in a white dominated world-the pain, the anger and the injustice. Coates uses strong, relentless language to express how he feels about our country’s treatment of blacks for over two hundred and fifty years. As a white privileged female, I felt shame, guilt and hopelessness as I read Between the World and Me, yet I am very glad that I read it.
Now and Again by Charlotte Rogan 437 pages
Charlotte Rogan’s second novel contains two parallel stories. One is the tale of Maggie Rayburn, an Oklahoma wife and mother, who reads in a confidential report which is not intended for her eyes, that toxic material is leaking out from the munitions plant where she works. The leak has the potential to harm humans, including unborn children. The second story is Penn Sinclair’s, an army captain in Iraq who, as a result of a poor decision on his part, has caused the deaths of two soldiers in his platoon. To atone, he tries to spread the word about the disastrous effects of warfare. Maggie and Penn are different in terms of background and education, but they both believe that truth and justice are important. Both take risks that take them out of their comfort zones, so that they can pursue causes they truly believe in.
The Year of the Runaways by Sunjeev Sahota 484 pages
A novel about young three men who leave India in hopes of a better life in England and a woman who tries to help is the focus of this hard-to-put-down read that was short-listed for the 2015 Man Booker Prize. Tochi leaves India for England after he witnesses his family being destroyed, Avtar and Randeep leave hoping to send their destitute families half of their wages, and Narinder agrees to a one year marriage because of guilt and a duty to her religion. All four of these young people live desperate lives, searching for food, shelter and work while evading the immigration authorities.
It will take a few chapters to fully understand the history and motives of the main characters but stay with it. The Year of the Runaways is well worth the work.
Evicted by Matthew Desmond 336 pages
Desmond’s sociological study of recent evictions in Milwaukee has received much hype and deservedly so. Evicted is engaging, well-documented and gave me much to think about. Studying the poor on that city’s north and south side, Desmond shows how easy it is to have a tenant evicted and how eviction can lead to depression, truancy, separation of mothers from their children and many more negative repercussions. What, for me, made this book so interesting was how Desmond zeroed in on eight individuals and followed them for several years to illustrate what’s wrong with the housing situation for the urban poor in this country.