Feed on
Posts
Comments

Why was he always in this situation, waiting for something to happen?   This must be what ‘living’ was all about.  While he was working at Tokyo Ad, it had actually been more a kind of death: a daily grind in an over-lit, ridiculously modern office where…[no one ever] got their hands dirty… Most likely, those colleagues would think it oddly contradictory now to discover Hanio, who had determined to die, sipping brandy and looking forward to the future.”

cover life for saleLife and death dominate much of the writing of prolific Japanese author Yukio Mishima (1925 – 1970),   the author of more than thirty novels, approximately fifty plays, twenty-five books of short stories, and six films, all of them written before he turned forty-five.  Yet though he was nominated for a Nobel Prize in 1968, before his famous Sea of Fertility tetralogy of historical novels was even finished, he is far better remembered, at least in western countries, for the nature of his death, rather than for the vibrant novels he wrote during his life.  The son of a conservative family, Yukio Mishima was always dedicated to Japan’s ancient samurai traditions, and his early death was by ritual suicide when he and three friends single-handedly tried and failed to bring about a coup at the Japan Self-Defense Headquarters in Tokyo on November 25, 1970.  They had hoped to restore the emperor to the power which he had lost twenty-five years earlier when Japan was forced to surrender at the end of World War II.  Details of Mishima’s ritual suicide, including his self-disembowelment and his botched beheading by his assistants, remain to this day the primary images of Mishima for many westerners who know his  name but are unfamiliar with his writing.

imagesFor Mishima, Japan’s past plays a major role in his best work, widely considered to be his Sea of Fertility tetralogy (Spring Snow,   Runaway Horses,  The Temple of Dawn,  and The Decay of the Angel), published in Japan between 1965 and 1970.  Here he follows one man, a young law student in his twenties in 1912 until his late years in the 1970s, when he is a retired judge.  His best friend, during this time, appears in successive reincarnations in the three later novels, which provide a vibrant picture of Japan, its people, and its culture from the beginning of World War I through World War II and its aftermath.  Mishima, however, did not limit himself to the kind of literary fiction which these novels embody.  His novel Star (1961) is the romantic story of a film star, a subject Mishima knew well from his own experience in film and stage.  Life for Sale, written in 1968, and just published in the US for the first time, is considered “pulp fiction,” though it is so well written that it feels less like pulp and more like a dark satire about a man without a real purpose, perhaps displaying some of the issues with which Mishima himself had to deal and which led to his own premature death.

"death hung over him, snugly, the way snow caps a red postbox after a particularly heavy snowfall.”

“Death hung over him, snugly, the way snow caps a red postbox after a particularly heavy snowfall.”

Life for Sale opens with main character Hanio in the hospital recovering from an overdose of a sedative, assumed to be intentional, though “He was not suffering as the result of some romantic breakup…Nor did he have any serious financial problems.”  He had been working as a copywriter for an advertising company and had no thoughts of suicide until he dropped a piece of newspaper.  When he stooped to pick it up, a cockroach had landed on top of it, and “Suddenly, all the letters he was trying to make out turned into cockroaches…as they made their escape, their disgustingly tiny dark-red backs in full view.”  He concludes, grimly, that “the world boils down to nothing more than this.” From that moment on, “death hung over him, snugly, the way snow caps a red postbox after a particularly heavy snowfall.”  Since his suicide attempt was a failure, he decides to resign from his job and use his substantial severance pay to do whatever he wants in what remains of his lifetime.  

The mobster who is having an affair with an old man's wife resembles a manga character which the wife enjoys.

The mobster who is having an affair with an old man’s wife resembles a character from the manga books which the wife enjoys.

Returning to his apartment, he places a note on his front door:  “Hanio Yamada – Life for Sale.”  What follows is a series of adventures, as five different characters come to his door to hire him to work on projects so dangerous that Hanio could die while working.  Since there are five successive “sales,” it is obvious that something unexpected happens each time Hanio is hired, and it is these bizarre twists which make the episodes intriguing.  His first customer, a well-dressed man in his seventies, comes to his apartment and describes his “magnificent” wife, now age twenty-three, confessing that she has left him and is now “shacked up” with a mobster, “but not your ordinary, run-of-the mill mobster.”  This one resembles a character from the manga stories his wife adores, and he has already “knocked off” a couple of people in turf wars.  The old man wants the mobster dead – and his wife, too. The second episode involves a woman who steals a rare library book describing a genus of Japanese beetle which can be ground and used as a powder to hypnotize a victim and make a death look like suicide.  She wants to test the effects of this scarab beetle and wants Hanio to be the test case.

A sketch by Tsuguharu Fugita was sold by a young boy to get money to hire Hanio.

A sketch by Tsuguharu Fujita was sold by a young boy to get money to hire Hanio.

A small boy figures in the third story, one which may bring smiles even as it becomes a horror story.  Young Kaoru has taken and sold a valuable family sketch by Tsuguharu Fujita to get the money needed to hire Hanio.  The boy’s mother, he says, is a vampire, and she is dying now from lack of nourishment.  The boy hires Hanio to keep his mother alive.   Episode #4 features an ambassador whose wife has an emerald necklace stolen at an official dinner.  The necklace contains a secret code, and several officials have died as a result of the enmity between two involved countries.  Poisoned carrots play a role, and once again, Hanio escapes.  “To say that human life had no meaning was the easy part, [and] Hanio was struck all over again by the huge amount of energy required to live a life filled with so much meaninglessness.”  The final story links all the others thematically and answers some of the final questions.  A young woman is wrongly convinced that she has a fatal illness, and Hanio finds himself being tracked as he deals with her and eventually, the police.

It is tempting to “see into” some of these episodes to imagine some of the issues which the author himself may have been facing in his own life, but the overall feeling here is one of clever trickery, rather than horror, with Mishima’s literary skill surviving even the accusation that this is “pulp” fiction.  His lighter touch here allows him to deal with life and death in a less serious fashion than in his great works, and the excitement he generates makes the book feel satiric and more fun to read, despite its occasional gore.

ALSO reviewed here:     FROLIC OF THE BEASTS,     SPRING SNOW #1,     RUNAWAY HORSES #2 ,      TEMPLE OF DAWN #3,       STAR

Photos.  The author’s photo appears on https://www.wallofcelebrities.com/

The red post box is from https://instaphenomenons.me

The mobster who is having an affair with an old man’s wife resembles a character in one of her manga favorites.  https://en.wikipedia.org/

Young Kaoru sells a sketch by famed Japanese artist Tsuguharu Fujita to pay for the services of Hanio in helping his mother regain her strength.  https://www.allpainter.com/

LIFE FOR SALE
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Literary, Satire, Psychological, Social and Political Issues,
Written by: Yukio Mishima
Published by: Penguin Classics
Date Published: 08/01/2019
ISBN: 978-0241333143
Available in: Paperback

“I’ve always warned clients that the criminal justice system doesn’t calibrate well.  It’s like a seventies-model Snapper Comet mower – you have three basic blade settings and that’s it.  We can handle fistfights, killings, shootings, knife scrapes, larcenies, heterosexual divorces, boundary line disputes and drug sales, the same old same old, but a well-done hustle as rare and layered as this will usually overwhelm a creaky contraption built by bewigged rustics who’d never heard of penicillin and would ooh and aah at a lightbulb.” – Kevin Moore, disgraced lawyer.

cover substitution orderAuthor Martin Clark, while working for twenty-seven years as a Virginia circuit court judge, somehow managed, at the same time, to write four highly successful novels.  His debut from 2000, The Many Aspects of Mobile Home Living, was a New York Times Notable Book for the year and a Book-of-the-Month-Club Selection.  Plain Heathen Mischief, in 2004, introduced me to this author, and I was thrilled when its successor, The Legal Limit, in 2008, was on the Washington Post list for Best Book of the Year, and was winner of the Library of Virginia People’s Choice Award for Fiction.  The Jezebel Remedy in 2015, led Entertainment Weekly to declare that “Clark is, hands-down, our finest legal thriller writer.”   Few full-time writers can come come close to duplicating this kind success, both with readers and with literary critics, and now Martin Clark has officially retired as a judge.  Still living in the countryside, on the border between Virginia and North Carolina, where he sets The Substitution Order, there is no telling where he will go with future novels or how many he will write, now that he has more time.

Author Martin Clark, former circuit court judge in Virginia for twenty-seven years, now retired.

Though all his books have an analytical approach to right and wrong, The Substitution Order is the most “legalistic” of his novels so far, a novel which focuses on a brilliant lawyer who, for three months of his life, lost control, made some terrible choices, and now must pay the penalty.  Through flashbacks, author Martin Clark brings disgraced lawyer Kevin Moore fully to life. Now living in a small, unincorporated community in rural Patrick County, near the North Carolina border, Kevin has fully recovered from a three-month addiction to cocaine and alcohol and has stayed clean, though he is disbarred.  With some court appearances still left in his own case, he works as manager of SUBstitution, a roadside sandwich shop.  There he is approached one day by a well-groomed out-of-towner who calls himself “Caleb,”  claiming to represent Melanie Culp, one of Kevin’s former clients during his brief “addiction period.”  Melanie, Caleb says, is suing Kevin for five million dollars, claiming malpractice because he did not advise her to exercise an option for some undeveloped land.  A real estate development company later bought and resold that land for six million dollars, more than five times the original price.  Melanie wants the money she would have gained if he had bothered to tell her to exercise her option on that land. 

Meadows of Dan, an unincorporated community in Patrick County, VA, where the action takes place.

Meadows of Dan, an unincorporated community in Patrick County, VA, where the action takes place.

Kevin denies any knowledge of such a land option, and suspecting a scam, he continues to question Caleb, who openly admits that he actually controls both companies involved in the eventual land sale, and that his ownership is “hidden behind layers of perfectly legal and impenetrable paperwork.”  He even admits, with a degree of pride, that “pigs get fat, [only] hogs get slaughtered,” and that he and his group keep their dollar amounts low enough to avoid investigations by insurance companies and monitoring groups.  They often use an offshore holding company and work to avoid any overlaps among shell companies and participants.  They pay taxes and include legitimate transactions in their finances, as well.  A few relatively “small” scams –  under five million dollars – funneled through their offshore companies, draw less attention than bigger ones by greedier people. They want the compromised Kevin to work with them.  He refuses.  They insist. 

Patrick County Courthouse

Patrick County Courthouse

From this relatively abrupt beginning, author Martin Clark begins the slow, inexorable deterioration of Kevin Moore, as disaster after disaster piles up. Though Kevin is convincing in his insistence that he is telling the truth and is willing to pay for his past mistakes, no one believes him – and with reason. The very real, provable evidence against him on just about every score is overwhelming.  Even a check of the SUBstitution’s security cameras show they were somehow “powered off” during his confrontation with Caleb, so there is no record even of that conversation. His drug tests are questionable, his marriage is in trouble, his finances are reduced to practically nil, and he is facing jail time.  Then two new charges are brought against him.  Believing many of his problems involve the collusion of people hiding in the bureaucracies with which he has had to deal over the years, Kevin takes on the world himself.  His inherent kindness keeps his closest friends wanting to believe and to help him, but even many of them begin to tire of his claim of innocence in the face of the overwhelming evidence.

Nelson - mostly white, with a bit of brown, and blue eyes - the hound Kevin rescued from a trash bin and who keeps him sane.

A dog similar to Nelson, the hound Kevin rescued from a trash bin and who keeps him sane.

Author Martin Clark’s characters live and breathe, and even if a reader becomes a bit confused by some of the legal issues in this novel – or stops to question how all these charges against him could possibly be false – s/he will root for Kevin Moore’s success throughout, despite the odds.  Several subordinate characters inspire the same feelings of loyalty.  Blaine Richardson, a twenty-year-old from a poor family, works at SUBstitution to save money for college, selling weed on the side very quietly.  Kevin helps him from the last of his savings, and Blaine, a genius with computers and math, helps Kevin, in turn.   Melvin Harrell, the wealthiest man in Patrick County, lets Kevin stay at his house as a caretaker while he is away, and goes so far as to build a pen for Nelson, Kevin’s recent rescue dog.  Even Kevin’s best friend from college and law school plays a role here.  The vibrant characters, their desire to help Kevin, and author Martin Clark’s own desire to tell a story about people dealing with reality and the law make the complexities of Kevin’s own legal case more understandable and intriguing for non-lawyers.  The conclusion, which comes in the last few pages of this complex novel, will stun the reader and resolve many issues.  Martin Clark has done it again.

ALSO by Martin Clark:  THE LEGAL LIMIT and    PLAIN HEATHEN MISCHIEF (Posted on another website in 2004)

The Mabry Mill, in Meadows of Dan, a serene scene which belies the tumult in Kevin Moore's life.

The Mabry Mill, in Meadows of Dan, a serene location which belies the tumult in Kevin Moore’s life.

Photos.  The author’s photo appears on https://hackneylibrary.wordpress.com

Meadows of Dan, where the action takes place, is an unincorporated community on the Virginia/North Carolina border, the area where the author himself lives.  http://www.poorfarmersmarket.biz/

The Patrick County Courthouse, where Kevin presented cases before his disbarment:  https://commons.wikimedia.org

Kevin’s rescue dog may have been similar to this American bulldog mixed breed puppy – white with brown patch and blue eyes.  https://www.dreamstime.com/

Mabry Mill in Meadows of Dan, a serene sight in the midst of tumult.  https://www.tripadvisor.com

THE SUBSTITUTION ORDER
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Literary, Mystery, Psychological study, Social and Political Issues, US Regional, Legal
Written by: Martin Clark
Published by: Knopf
Date Published: 07/09/2019
ISBN: 978-0525656326
Available in: Ebook Hardcover

“Like many writers before me, I believe in coincidence and, sometimes, in the novelist’s gift for clairvoyance… It simply comes with the profession: the imaginative leaps this requires, the need to fix your mind on points of detail – to the point of obsession, in fact – so as not to lose the thread and give in to natural laziness – all this tension, this cerebral exercise may well lead in the long run to ‘flashes of intuition concerning events past and future,’ as the Larousse dictionary puts it, under the heading of ‘clairvoyance.’ ” – Patrick Modiano

cover dora bruderOriginally published in November, 1996, when French author Patrick Modiano was fifty-one, Dora Bruder gives new insights into the complex life and career of this Nobel Prize winner (2014).  From his first three novels, The Occupation Trilogy: La Place de l’etoile (1968, a prizewinner when he was only 23) ; The Night Watch (1969), and Ring Roads (1972), Modiano became a writing sensation in Paris, often using his own life as the inspiration for his work. Though he has always stressed that he writes fiction, the clear parallels between his plots and his life are obvious.  Such Fine Boys (1982), about a teenager who goes to an elite private school in which the faculty become the equivalent of his missing parents, includes such detail that it leaves no doubt that Modiano lived this life or one much like it.  Suspended Sentences: Three Novellas (1988), which he published in 1988, is the most revealing of all Modiano’s work, focusing on his real life from about age ten, in the mid-1950s.  Modiano saw very little of his parents during his childhood, as his mother, an actress, and his father, a black marketeer during the Occupation and the aftermath of World War II, were rarely at home.  Abandoning Patrick to the care of a group of circus performers living outside Paris, his parents disappeared from his life for long periods of time.  Later he was sent to boarding school and left to bring himself up with the help of his teachers, one of whom, author Raymond Queneau, became a mentor, helping him get started as a writer.

author photoBy 1988, when Modiano was forty-three, he had already enjoyed twenty years of success as a writer.  It was then that he found an old copy of Paris-Soir dated 31 December, 1941, announcing:

“PARIS: Missing, a young girl, Dora Bruder, age 15, height 1m 55, oval-shaped face, gray-brown eyes, gray sports jacket, maroon pullover, navy blue skirt and hat, brown gym shoes.

Modiano was well familiar with the Boulevard Ornano and the Porte de Clingnancourt neighborhood from his earliest years, when he occasionally accompanied his mother to flea markets there.  In his twenties, he had hung out in the neighborhood cafes. Now, in 1988, almost fifty years after the “missing” announcement from 1941, he cannot stop wondering what became of Dora and her life there.  Though he remembers the Cinema Ornano 43, he never really noticed the building beside the cinema, number 41, where M. and Mme Bruder awaited Dora in 1941.  Of his own early life in that neighborhood, he says “I merged into that twilight, into those streets, I was nonexistent.”

Stall at flea market in Clingnancourt, which Modiano visited with his mother.

Stall at flea market in Clingnancourt, which Modiano visited with his mother.

Suddenly, Modiano feels destined to learn more about Dora Bruder’s life and fate. The “fleeting impressions” he still has of conversations in the neighborhood are not “simply due to chance,” he believes. He wonders if he is “following the traces of Dora Bruder and her parents,” a suggestion of the clairvoyance he describes in the introductory quotation to this review.  After so many years since that newspaper notice about Dora, he knows that any research he does on her life will be slow.  “It takes time for what has been erased to resurface.  Traces survive in registers, and nobody knows where those registers are hidden, and who has custody of them.”  It takes Modiano four years to discover her exact date of birth, 25 February 1926, for example, and two more years to find her place of birth, Paris, 12th arrondissement.  He learns that Dora’s Viennese father Ernest married Cecile, a seventeen-year-old girl from Hungary, and when they came to Paris after World War I, they lived at the Jewish refuge inn, the Rue Lamarck.  After that they lived in hotels till Dora’s birth.  “They are the sort of people who leave few traces.  Virtually anonymous.  Inseparable from those Paris streets,” Modiano declares.

Dora Bruder with her mother and father, about 1938

Dora Bruder with her mother and father, about 1938. Click to enlarge.

A remarkable breakthrough – perhaps the kind of coincidence or “novelist’s clairvoyance” mentioned in the opening quotation to this review – occurs when Modiano locates Ernest and Cecile Bruder’s niece, Dora’s cousin.  Fifty years after Dora’s disappearance, she still remembers Dora and her parents and she has family photographs, two of which appear in this book. In one photo, Dora is twelve; the other shows her a little older, with her mother and grandmother, giving a sense of reality, not only for the author but for the reader, too.  Her cousin remembers Dora as especially independent, and Modiano soon discovers that after the point at which her name appeared in the newspaper as a missing child in December 1941, no other trace of her was found for four months, when official papers show she was returned to the “maternal domicile.”  She ran away again from school and home, and she spent some time in a “rehabilitation center for delinquent girls,” not unlike a place Modiano says he himself went to for treatment one day at age eighteen.  Dora continued to create problems for her family and school, and though her father never reported her as a dependent when she was at school, thereby keeping her name off the lists of Jewish residents during the Occcupation, their heritage was well known.

cover-suspended-sentences 2.29.59 PMReaders who know Modiano’s own background cannot help but feel that in many ways, his  continuing desire to construct a life for Dora Bruder may be a response to his own anonymity and lack of parenting for most of his childhood and adolescence – a feeling that somebody, somewhere, cares.  While Ernest Bruder protected his daughter Dora as well as he could, Modiano notes the ironic contrast with his own father, who ignored him for most of his life and then had the police arrest him as a “hooligan” when he went to his father’s house in the early 1960s seeking more support for his mother.  He continues his research on Dora’s life from his start in 1988 until this book is finished in 1996, while also writing seven books, including Suspended Sentences, his own most revelatory novel, published in the year Dora went missing.  He and the reader learn something about her life and who she is, but there are no further avenues left to explore.  Modiano does not bemoan the fact that he will never really know her in any depth, preferring to remember her secrets of escape, which “not even the executioners, the decrees, the occupying authorities” will ever be able to take from her memory.  With this book, young Dora Bruder has gained a life, however brief.

ALSO reviewed here: AFTER THE CIRCUS,    FAMILY RECORD,   HONEYMOON,     IN THE CAFE OF LOST YOUTH,     LA PLACE de L’ETOILE (Book 1 of the OCCUPATION TRILOGY),    (with Louis Malle–LACOMBE LUCIEN, a screenplay,    LITTLE JEWEL,    THE NIGHT WATCH (Book II of the OCCUPATION TRILOGY),    THE OCCUPATION TRILOGY (LA PLACE DE L’ETOILE, THE NIGHT WATCH, AND RING ROADS),    PARIS NOCTURNE,     PEDIGREE: A Memoir,    RING ROADS (Book III of the OCCUPATION TRILOGY),    SLEEP OF MEMORY,    SO YOU DON’T GET LOST IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD,    SUCH FINE BOYS,    SUNDAYS IN AUGUST,    SUSPENDED SENTENCES,    VILLA TRISTE,    YOUNG ONCE

Post-Nobel Prize books:  SLEEP OF MEMORY (2017), INVISIBLE INK (2019)

Photos, in order:  The author’s photo appears on https://www.facebook.com/

The photo of the Bruder family is from https://sophia.smith.edu

The flea market at Clingnancourt is part of a series on https://www.ohhowcivilized.com

DORA BRUDER
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Autobiography/Memoir, Experimental, France, Literary, Psychological study, Social and Political Issues
Written by: Patrick Modiano
Published by: University of California Press
Date Published: 11/07/2014
Edition: Nobel Prize Winning Author edition
ISBN: 978-0520218789
Available in: Ebook Paperback Hardcover

“My legs are strong; my body is strong, a farmer’s body built for physical labor.  The world has farmers, and I’m a good farmer.  But right now I’m an elevator attendant even though such a job shouldn’t exist in this world.  Is it so troublesome to lift your hand up and press a button that they have to pass this task off to someone else, someone who could do so many other things?  If I had been born with one hand and an index finger this job would be suitable for me.” – from “The Attendant.

When I finished rcover arid dreamseading Arid Dreams, the first collection of Thai author Duanwad Pimwana’s stories ever to be translated into English, I was so stunned that I had to wait a day before even beginning this review.  To say it is a powerful and dramatic collection of thirteen short stories so understates the collection’s ability to affect the reader emotionally that it would be unfair to characterize it in such a limited fashion.  Vibrant characters, intense interactions, and beautifully controlled themes feature in realistic stories about the daily lives of the hardworking poor and those who have dreams but little or no opportunity to act upon them.  Cultural expectations play a big part in the conflicts and disasters which some of the characters face, and though these may be shocking to American readers, they are taken for granted by the characters themselves.  As the reader becomes more and more deeply involved with these stories, which show people both as individuals and as members of a broader society, it is impossible not to care about them and how they live, doing what they must do to survive.

Author Duanwad Pimwana

Author Duanwad Pimwana’s earlier novel BRIGHT is the first novel by a Thai woman ever to be published in the US.  (Citation from the Center for the Art of Translation)

The opening story, “Arid Dreams,” tells of a man who returns to a place that was his dream vacation spot when he was a student, now so overcrowded he must move to a village hotel away from the beach to find a room.  While there, he becomes obsessed with a beautiful woman wearing an old-fashioned top and sarong whom he later discovers to be a masseuse.  When he learns that she will spend the night with a guest at his hotel, he inquires about that, but though she will give him a massage, she will not spend the night.  The reasons why make him see her in a completely different light.  A similar change of opinion and attitudes also occurs in “Wood Children,” in which a woman desperate to have a child begins to carve images of children out of wood, becoming increasingly proficient. Worried about her growing obsession, her husband comes home one night with the young son of one of his construction workers, who will visit for the evening, and she is thrilled and happy as she bonds with the child. Convinced his wife no longer needs the wooden images she has been carving, her husband takes actions which have unexpected consequences.  In “The Attendant,” quoted in the opening lines of this review, the main character nears the end of his shift as an elevator operator, a job in which he sits most of the day with only his hand and his head getting any real exercise.  He is distressed that tomorrow he will again need to “have the strength to come back and sit still once again.”  He bemoans his fate and the end of his dreams for the day.

elevator

An old-fashioned elevator, with the gear and seat in the bottom left, feels like prison.

These three stories – “Arid Dreams,” “Wood Children,” and “The Attendant” are all similar in that a main character is powerless to change circumstances in spite of his/her hopes, but they are very different in their effects on the reader. Whereas “Arid Dreams” is fairly light in subject, with a main character unable to procure the prostitute of his dreams, “The Attendant,” by contrast, has no way of controlling his dreams – and his memories of the past – because of his poverty and need for work.  “Wood Children” is, by far, the most involving of these three, dealing as it does with the desperate dream of a woman for a child and the accidents of chance which determine her life and over which she has no control.

When a man's wife arrives at home at dawn, he believes she is having and affair and takes action.

When a man’s wife arrives at home at dawn, he believes she is having an affair and takes action.

“Men’s Rights,” a title which says it all, is a powerful story of cultural differences, and when it appears at about the mid-point of the collection, the reader will already have recognized that in these stories women are constantly being required to act in ways established by the culture but contrary to what they would choose to do on their own.  Here a husband hears his wife arriving home by motorbike at 5:00 a.m. and concludes that she is having an affair.  Because of this, he feels compelled to kill her, once he identifies her lover.  The couple has a violent argument in which she escapes their house, and the husband must then discover where she has gone and with whom.  Of all the many surprises in this collection, the conclusion of this story is something I do not believe any westerner will ever expect.  Its revelation of the culture in which these characters live comes as a complete surprise – unique among all the books I have ever reviewed.

A family's sudden need to move affects whether the children can go to a much anticipated fair.

A family’s sudden need to move affects whether the children can go to a much anticipated fair.

Other stories reflect other issues involving families.  The humorous “How a Lad Found His Uncle and Learned a Lesson” is the story of a naive young man whose life has always been comfortable, though he has never met his father.  His discovery of an uncle he did not know he had leads him to grow up more quickly than he expected.  “Sandals” tells of two young children whose poor parents must suddenly move, with the whole family leaving their home to cut sugarcane starting the next day.  The children will have to miss their chance to go a local fair that they have dreamed of all year. “The Way of the Moon” tells of the loving relationship between a father and son as they make special trips to view the moon and its possible effect on the writing of both father and son.

map thailandAuthor Duanwad Pimwana makes her points by keeping the focus domestic, an approach which allows her readers to identify with much of the action by imagining themselves in similar circumstances and then envisioning how they themselves would respond. What is different here is that the female author uses the male point of view (very effectively) in ten of the thirteen stories.  Two additional stories involve two people, and only one story, “Within these Walls,” is told by a woman.  Here a wife thinks about her dying husband, the top aide to a politician, and the comfortable life she has led.  His death would free her from many restrictions, though real freedom both thrills and terrifies her.  Published by Feminist Press at The City University of New York, this book will energize feminists, but its themes are so universal that perceptive male readers, too, will see how this culture, however “foreign,” affects behavior in ways not dissimilar to what is sometimes seen in the contemporary U.S., especially issues involving human rights, the role of women in society, and the need for communication and understanding.

Photos.  The author’s photo appears on https://www.catranslation.org    Her earlier novel, Bright, is the first novel by a Thai woman ever to be published in translation in the US.

This old fashioned elevator required an operator to open and close the doors and to control its stops and starts with the gear in the bottom left.  A seat is provided for the operator.  www.tripadvisor.com/

The woman on the motorbike arrives near dawn in “Men’s Rights,” a dramatic and powerful story of a marriage.  https://www.istockphoto.com/

A family sudden need to move so that the family can all cut the sugar cane the next day spoils the children’s chances to go to a fair.  https://www.123rf.com/

The map of Thailand and its neighbors is from https://www.vectorstock.com/

ARID DREAMS
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Literary, Psychological study, Social and Political Issues, Thailand
Written by: Duanwad Pimwana
Published by: Feminist Press at CUNY
Date Published: 04/16/2019
ISBN: 978-1936932566
Available in: Ebook Paperback

Kate Atkinson–BIG SKY

Note:  Kate Atkinson was WINNER of the Whitbread Book of the Year Award for her first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum (1995), and was twice WINNER of the Costa Award, its renamed successor, for Life After Life (2013) and A God in Ruins (2015). 

“They weren’t stupid, they knew about trafficking, about people who tricked girls into thinking they were going to good jobs, proper jobs, who then ended up drugged, trapped in some filthy hole of a room having sex with one man after another, unable to get home again because their passports had been confiscated and they had to “earn” them back.  [Anderson Price Associates] wasn’t like that.  They had a professional website, all aboveboard.”

cover big sky

Kate Atkinson has rightfully developed a huge following with her impeccably crafted novels filled with ingenious plots, mysteries, and themes highlighted by unexpected ironies and dark humor.  This, her twelfth novel, is the fifth in which she features Jackson Brodie, a detective who never seems to get his life together personally.  Brodie has been hired by a wealthy wife to trail her golf-playing, country club husband, whom she believes to be having an affair.  No matter what Brodie discovers or fails to discover, the wife wants him to continue trailing her husband.   Unimportant in its own right, this plot thread ironically serves as a unifying idea for this book, with many bigger and more important plots and subplots, all of them unconnected until about a hundred pages into the book.  At that point, several coincidences, obviously well planned, begin to create overlaps among the characters and their lives.  As these are revealed, the reader discovers for the first time that the forty or so characters introduced in the first hundred pages here are not operating in a vacuum – except the vacuum deliberately created by Kate Atkinson to keep the reader guessing about what may happen in the still undeveloped subplots involving many undeveloped characters.

Author Kate Atkinson

Author Kate Atkinson

The book requires patience, well rewarded at the end.  The first plot, and Atkinson’s whole approach, is exemplified by the ironies in the opening quotation, as two sisters from Poland, one of whom, Nadja, has a degree in Hospitality Management, contact Anderson Price Associates in London which employs three of the men who become main characters.  Mark Price, a generic name for the company, tells these young women on the phone that the company will pay their way if they want to come to England to work and if they provide him with their papers.  Nadja has been impressed at what she has seen on Skype when she has connected with Mark Price, who tells her he has something in mind “for a bright girl” like her.  As she stares at the screen, she can see the Anderson Price logo on the wall, along with artwork, and an orchid, and hear the voices of the staff in the background, the tapping of keyboards, and ringing of phones.  She never dreams that at the end of the call, Mark Price will lock up the mobile home where he is working alone and climb into his Land Rover, heading for home. “Mark Price was a fake….Only his Rolex was real.” 

Whitby Abbey overlooks the town of Whitby, where the action takes place and where the author herself lived for a time.

Whitby Abbey overlooks the town of Whitby, where the action takes place and where the author herself lived for a time.

A quick change of scenery introduces Jackson Brodie and his thirteen-year-old son Nathan, who is bored to tears at the reenactment of the Battle of the River Plate, a miniature naval battle at a local park.  Nearby, at the Belvedere Golf Club, Thomas Holroyd, the owner of a haulage company; Andrew Bragg, a hotelier and travel agent; and Vincent Ives, a quiet man in the telecom business, whom the others consider an outsider, are on the green enjoying their day.  Their marriages and current wives, their children, houses, and daily lives are depicted here in great detail, slowly and without excitement, all part of what appears to be Kate Atkinson’s overall plan to keep the reader ignorant of the real action, with characters floating around, and the plot lines undeveloped and unconnected long enough to increase suspense dramatically.

Several accidents and a death occur along the Cleveland Way trail in Whitby.

A death and an accident occur along the Cleveland Way trail in Whitby.

A hint of mystery occurs when Crystal, wife of golfer Tommy Holroyd, begins to panic because she believes that she is being followed by a man in a silver BMW.  Then two more new characters are introduced.  Reggie Chase, whom Jackson Brodie has known from the past, and her partner Ronnie Dibicki, both in their mid-twenties, are now working for the police on cold case files, and they eventually begin to discover strange activities which involve the “golfers” from the club. As they investigate further, the men’s activities enticing young girls into sexual slavery begin to become clear.  By coincidence, Jackson, who has no connection to this investigation, sees a thirteen-year-old girl getting into a suspicious car on the street with an older man, but as Jackson is no longer in the police department, he has no one to report it to.  In the meantime, the details of the domestic lives of all the characters, their wives, and their busy children, continue to unfold, and the direction of the novel begins to feel almost random, with a huge assortment of characters and actions which have yet to connect significantly.  The character list continues to grow even longer, and the book seems to be getting heavier. 

Whitby's famed Whalebone Arch.

Whitby’s famed Whalebone Arch. Photo by Ron Jnr

At this point, it is crucial for readers to trust the intelligence and care for detail which Kate Atkinson has already proven in her previous novels.  She has planned this book to the nth degree, and it does resolve itself completely and spectacularly by the end, however complex it feels in the long beginning.  The shocking death of Wendy, almost ex-wife of the quiet Vince, the outsider of the golfing group, occurs shortly after the hundred-page mark.  From that point on, the various subplots begin to overlap, often through coincidence, and then become increasingly intertwined.  Additional deaths occur, the child pornography and the sex trade become a bigger part of the plotting, organized crime shows its hand, and the sleazy business of amusement parks and fairground activity involves some of the characters.  As the action takes its twists and turns, the reader gradually becomes increasingly involved with the characters, and Atkinson’s grand plan begins to become clearer.  By the end of the novel, every detail, every question, every conflict, and every unusual activity is resolved and explained.

Crystal, wife of Tommy Holroyd regards her Evoque car with near reverence.

Crystal, wife of Tommy Holroyd, regards her Evoque car with near reverence.

Atkinson is such a creative writer that even the resolutions to some of these plot issues are not traditional or expected.  It is here in the conclusion that Jackson Brodie not only shows his character and his sense of justice, but actively helps some of the subordinate characters to achieve justice of their own.  By the time “The Fat Lady Sings” in the last chapter, many readers will be so energized by Kate Atkinson’s talent in drawing together the hundreds of details which feel so random in the beginning, that they, like the actor Bunny Hopps here, will be “soaring,” the “gods” will be laughing, the stars will be “twinkling like sequins,” and Atkinson’s many fans will be cheering.

ALSO by Kate Atkinson:  CASE HISTORIES (Brodie #1),      ONE GOOD TURN (Brodie #2),      WHEN WILL THERE BE GOOD NEWS (Brodie #3),    STARTED EARLY, TOOK MY DOG (Brodie #4) ,   

LIFE AFTER LIFE,       A GOD IN RUINS,       TRANSCRIPTION

Photos.  The author’s photo appears on https://www.telegraph.co.uk/

The history of Whitby Abbey, pictured here, may be found on https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/

The Cleveland Way trail is part of the national trail program in the UK:  https://www.nationaltrail.co.uk/

This stunning photo of the Whalebone Arch in Whitby is by Ron Jnr and may also be found on https://www.trover.com

Crystal Holroyd, whose past is checkered, regards her Evoque car as a symbol of her changed life.  https://auto.ndtv.com

BIG SKY
REVIEW. PHOTOS. England, Literary, Mystery, Jackson Brodie
Written by: Kate Atkinson
Published by: Little, Brown
Date Published: 06/25/2019
ISBN: 978-0316523097
Available in: Ebook Paperback Hardcover

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »