Thursday, January 20, 2011

Daniel, By Henning Mankell

It seems I've written a review that just appeared in The Washington Post. This time it's about Daniel, a newly published novel by the Swedish writer Henning Mankell.

You know Mr. Mankell's work? He's the guy behind the Wallander detective series. I'd read a couple of those novels before (and watched the tv series), so I was very keen to take a look at this historical novel, one that draws together characters from Sweden and Southern Africa.

You can read it HERE: A trip to the Kalahari changes everything.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Brisingr

Well, I did it. I accepted The Washington Post's offer to review Christopher Paolini's Brisingr. I knew when I said yes that I was signing on for a good bit of work and potentially a hard slog, but, what the heck? I've reviewed for The Post before, but never done the embargoed book instant bestseller type of review. You can't say I don't like to try new things.

I knew that I'd have to read Eragon and Eldest, and that I wouldn't get Brisingr until the day it was published, since no copies were to be released before then. And I knew I'd need to read it fast and file faster. But it wasn't until a few days before the book came out that I asked exactly when they wanted the review filed. The answer... (Remember, the book comes out on Saturday) "Monday would be great. Tuesday doable."

What? Tuesday? You mean, like four days after the book pubs? This 750 page book? And then I started to calculate other factors, like the fact that I'd be spending Saturday in the car taking Gudrun and the kids to the airport. And on Monday I have to prepare for class, have office hours, and then teach until 9:50 at night. Friends, I was dismayed.

But, you see, I have this unfortunate trait wherein I don't like to fail to fulfill my obligations. So, I read. I read. I read. I fell asleep. I woke. I read. I finished the book Tuesday morning and managed to send the review off that evening. We fine tuned it a bit on Wednesday morning and, presto, here it is in all it's glory, 900+ words that feel - to me - like rather scant testament to several sleepless nights.

What did I think? Well, it's The Post's property now. You can read it by clicking here.

By the way, the author of the review doesn't choose the title. Just so you know...

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Wednesday, July 04, 2007

July Fourth

Hello and Happy Fourth of July!

I've not blogged for a few days because we were in the midst of moving house again. (No, I wasn't just fleeing the Black Widow!) I'm in Fresno now, and there are plenty of Widows here. We decided that we needed to be in town in preparation for my teaching in the MFA program here at Cal State. So the move has taken up a good bit of my energy these last few days. But we're here now, and we're gonna stay put for a while.

As for Acacia: The War with the Mein news, I was pleased with a kind mention in the Contra Costa Times. It was a bit of a fantasy/sci-fi roundup, lead by Patrick Rothfuss and with the likes of Harry Turtledove and John Scalzi in there as well.

I also came across a heartfelt blog post by a guy named Joey Clifton. He's not a reviewer or author or anything like that. He's a reader, though. He writes about Gabriel's Story as a sort of life changing book for him. That's wonderful to hear, and wonderful to be reminded that these books have lives and interactions of their own that are happening daily. Coming across Joey's post was a glimpse into that reality, and I'm thankful for it.

On another note, a review I wrote of Clare Clark's The Nature of Monsters appeared in today's Washington Post. You can check it out here. For my part I had quite mixed feelings about the book, which I discuss in the review. I'm happy to say that lots of others like her work unreservedly, though. Why am I happy to say that? Because I know how hard it is to write novels, and I hope that anyone who manages to do it also manages to connect with some readers.

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Sunday, February 18, 2007

Jesse Owens

A review I wrote was published today in the Raleigh News & Observer. The book was Triumph: The Untold Story of Jesse Owens and Hitler's Olympics, by Jeremy Schaap. They titled the review Racing into history: Jesse Owens proved the lie of Hitler's racial theories at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, and actually made it the lead article. This is how it begins...

The year was 1936. The place was Hitler's Berlin. The man was Jesse Owens, the African-American track and field star from rural Alabama who won gold in four events and broke records in all but one (that would be the 100 meters, in which his record time wasn't allowed because the judges concluded the tailwind must have aided him). We all remember that he rolled over Nazi racist propaganda like a freight train and secured a place as one of sports most enduring figures. Those are the familiar facts. The story behind that performance is considerably richer, though, as Jeremy Schaap reminds us in his new biography..."

And then it goes on. If you're interested in the book's strength's and weaknesses click on the link above. It'll take you to my two cents about it.

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Saturday, November 25, 2006

Review of The Ruby in Her Navel

I wrote a review of Barry Unsworth's new book for The Washington Post, the Sunday, November 26, 2006 edition. I was honored and a bit daunted to be asked to review Mr. Unsworth - Internationally known Booker Prize winner and all that. But I kinda enjoyed it. Nor was it hard for my thoughts about the book to emerge and take shape. I open the review with this...

Barry Unsworth has written about topics as varied as the Atlantic slave trade, theater in 14th-century Britain and politics during the Trojan War. In each case, he highlights the foibles, crimes and moral dilemmas of the past. Strange thing is -- and it's one of Unsworth's strengths -- those foibles, crimes and moral dilemmas seem a lot like what we're up to in the present moment. He has a knack for making the past seem authentic in its historical detail while injecting his tales with lessons relevant to our contemporary struggles. That's the case once again in The Ruby in Her Navel: A Novel...

The full review is at Washington Post Bookworld.

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Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Review of Calvin Baker's "Dominion"

I wrote a review a little while back of Calvin Baker's novel, Dominion. It was published in the Raleigh News & Observer on August 13 2006. It's been a little while since then, so I thought I'd post it here also with the hopes of persuading a few more folks to give Mr. Baker's book a shot. Here's how it went...

A mythic tale of blacks in early N.C.
By David Anthony Durham

In the opening pages of Calvin Baker's third novel, "Dominion," Jasper Merian battles an evil spirit to win dominion over his newly acquired land. He chains the spirit to the bottom of a lake in an episode that calls to mind Beowulf's underwater clash with Grendel's mother.

It also rings with similarities to the opening of the Scottish writer Lewis Grassic Gibbon's classic novel "Sunset Song," in which a landless traveler does battle with a Gryphon. On defeating the beast, he is awarded the land he liberated for "him and the issue of his body
forever after." So too does Jasper triumph over his spirit-monster, winning the right to carve out a home for his family.

What makes these allusions so startling is that Jasper is a recently freed slave in 17th-century America. As Baker tells the tale of three generations of an African-American family in the years leading up to and including the Revolutionary War, he references literature from a Western tradition that has rarely been equated with the black experience. The merging of classical references with the hardscrabble facts of early American life infuses a mythic grandeur into the founding of the nation and skews racial stereotypes so completely that some readers may be challenged to even recognize his characters as black.

Once the troublesome spirit is dealt with, Jasper sets about taming his wild, hilly North Carolina holding. The task fires him with purpose and ambition: Jasper "could not contain his vanity and surveyed the increasing space he was creating in the woods, beaming broadly ... None could stop him from dreaming then, as he looked upon his lands, and shone like a newborn constellation in the early evening sky."

He builds a home he calls Stonehouses and soon finds a wife, Sanne. Together they have a son, Purchase. As they continue to expand their holdings, Jasper lives unsure of what the future holds, but intent on persevering: "Of the future he knew not, and tried not to give much care, knowing only that he could not foresee it, but that things would pass in their time, and work either for good or ill depending on other devices."

A great deal of the novel passes this way, a chronicle of lives and destinies unfolding. It is rendered in eloquent language that ennobles black and white, slave or free characters. There are moments when the omniscient narrator feels similar to the one used by Edward P. Jones in his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about a slave-owning freedman, "The Known World." But "Dominion" is less concerned with the intricacies of slavery than with the nature of identity.

Baker has written about race before in his two previous novels "Naming the New World" and "Once Two Heroes" but here his elevated language highlights the shared humanity of his characters. Baker asks readers to reflect on the social complexity of America in a time before slavery had been thoroughly codified and institutionalized.

Years pass. The Merians prosper. Jasper's son from his first marriage shows up at Stonehouses. He has run away from his plantation and is welcomed into the family. The two sons -- one free, the other a fugitive -- grow to maturity under Jasper's watchful eyes. The fate of all those at Stonehouses ebbs and flows, sometimes turned by whims of nature, sometimes touched with mystic import.

In one episode, Purchase, now a blacksmith, crafts a sword of prophetic artistry. Those who gaze upon it see within its swirls and contours the entire history of the Merian family, past, present and into the future. In the same way that only King Arthur, the rightful heir, could pull Excalibur from the stone, nobody but a man of the Merian family can so much as lift Purchase's masterwork.

Such moments suggest an unfolding providence at work, but at other times the characters are possessed by unreasoned impulses that seem to highjack the direction of the narrative. Purchase, for example, falls into an all-consuming love for a traveling preacher woman. He abandons his family to chase her. They share an on-and-off love that is never truly explained. His child from this relationship, Caleum, is sent to Stonehouses, where he becomes the third generation of Merians to work the land. Purchase, however, never truly returns to reckon with the family he left behind.

Toward the end of the novel, the mythological underpinnings again come to the front. At the Revolutionary War battle of Saratoga, Caleum fights with the familial sword. He slays numberless foes. Eventually, he does single-combat with a hero from the British side, a slave named Jupiter. Their clash seems to have leapt from the pages of "The Iliad."
Not long after this, Caleum -- wounded, chastened -- turns toward home and walks for a time in Odysseus' shoes. Like Homer's character, he returns to find his wife being courted by other men, with demons yet to be reckoned with before he can find peace.

At times "Dominion" can be a frustrating novel. It can feel rangy, as if the author and the characters are both trying to find their purpose and not always succeeding. There is a lack of closure to some of the important narrative threads -- including a true reckoning with the hole in the novel that Purchase's absence becomes. And there are times when Baker seems to squander opportunities for exploring the issue of slavery.

In one instance, a friend of Caleum's is captured by a slave dealer, transported to market and sold -- despite the fact that the young man was actually free. It seems strange that the narrative chooses to follow a character outside the Merian family, one who is introduced at the moment of his misfortune. Stranger still that his story is soon dropped.

Nevertheless, "Dominion" is an intriguing mythologizing of an African-American family's destiny. It is sewn together like a quilt that incorporates classical influences with the hardships of the early American frontier, creating from them a unique patchwork-style portrait. Baker has pushed the boundaries of African-American literature. Hopefully he -- and other writers -- will build on this ambitious effort.

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