Patti's Pages
Taking Looks at Books
Monday, September 15, 2025
THIS OTHER EDEN by Paul Harding
This fictional account of the real displacement of the
people living on an island off the coast of Maine could have gotten bogged down
in sentimentality. Instead, it is a
clear-eyed view of a very small mostly Black population who live in isolation,
and we know from the beginning that all of the residents will eventually be evicted
and resettled elsewhere or institutionalized.
The novel opens with a gripping account of a flood, and generations
later a murder occurs, and this latter time period is when the rest of the
action takes place, although the word “action” may not be appropriate, since
the pace is pretty slow. A white man,
Matthew Diamond, starts a school there, and despite his disdain for Black
people in general, he finds that several of his students are very bright. One girl becomes a Latin scholar, and another
soon exceeds the teacher’s mathematical ability. A teenage boy, Ethan, a mixed race artist who
can pass for white, has exceptional talent and goes to the mainland so that he
can attend art school. One section of
the book is devoted to his experiences away from the island, and except for the
auspicious beginning of the novel, this section was the most engrossing. One of the men involved in removing the
island residents describes the situation to his wife in very stark and unsavory
terms, giving us some idea of why this displacement was allowed to happen. However, his observations ignore the fact
that these people are a loving family to one another and not just poor and
dirty nameless beings. The intermarrying
and incest may have ultimately doomed this tiny population anyway, but booting
them out of their homes was cruel and unnecessary.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
NIGHT WHEREVER WE GO by Tracey Rose Peyton
Six women slaves of varying backgrounds live on a Texas farm that is struggling to make a profit. Next to the land itself, these women are the most valuable proper that the Lucys own. Lucy is not their actual surname, but it is the one assigned by the slave women because they associate their devilish owners with Lucifer. Lashes may be the most frequent punishment, but that does not compare to the anguish they experience over separation from their loved ones. One woman is in love with a slave on a neighboring plantation, and one hopes to visit her children on a steamboat trip with Mrs. Lucy. One has a teenage son, also owned by the Lucys, but the other women expect never to see their families again. In order to expand their workforce, the Lucys bring in a slave whose only job is to impregnate the women, but they go to some lengths to thwart this plan. The problem with this book is that it doesn’t really seem to go anywhere until we get to the very rushed and not entirely clear ending. I felt so puzzled, let down, and frustrated that I regretted having ever started reading this book. Inside the dust jacket the blurb has this headline: “A gripping, radically intimate debut novel about a group of enslaved women staging a covert rebellion against their owners.” This description is entirely misleading, as it implies more action than actually takes place.
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
THE WORLD AND ALL THAT IT HOLDS by Aleksandar Hemon
Rafael Pinto steps outside his Jewish family’s pharmacy in
Sarajevo and witnesses the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Thus begins WWI, and what would seem to be an
auspicious beginning for this book. Pinto
lands on the front lines, along with the handsome Osman, and the two become
devoted lovers. The storyline is a
series of Pinto’s adventures, including imprisonment, near starvation, a
six-year trek across the desert, a sandstorm, and almost wasting away in opium
dens. Pinto becomes the protector of a
child named Rahela, who may be Osman’s biological daughter, and whose
responsibility is the only thing standing between Pinto and the fulfillment of
his death wish. The storyline here
should be exciting, but I found that the writing style does not supply
sufficient verve. A British spy appears
in the narrative from time to time to spice things up, but moments that grabbed
my attention were just too infrequent. Also,
the author includes many untranslated sentences and songs in Bosnian or German
or Spanjol, which is a version of Spanish.
Frankly, I didn’t mind getting to leapfrog these sections, as skipping
these foreign phrases propelled me to the finish a little faster.
Sunday, September 7, 2025
THE LAZARUS PROJECT by Aleksandar Hemon
Vladimir Brik, a Bosnian native living in the U.S. with his
neurosurgeon wife, has decided to write a book about Lazarus Averbuch, a young
Jewish man who was killed under suspicious circumstances a century
earlier. Brik uses grant money to
research Averbuch’s history in the Balkans, accompanied by an acquaintance from
Brik’s Sarajevo days, Rora, a photographer.
The timeline here is fluid, to say the least, as the storyline
oscillates between Averbuch’s story and Brik’s travels, which sometimes involve
border crossings in cars with reckless drivers who frown on seatbelts. At times, I got bogged down in the unfamiliar
history of the breakup of Yugoslavia, and my attention span waned. Hemon, however, is quite the wordsmith,
especially given that English is not his first language. For example, here are a couple of my favorite
passages. On page 229, we have the
sentence, “Her hair seemed to be ponytailed to the point of pain.” I love this visual and always admire an
author who can convert a noun to a verb with such a vivid result. Then on page 263, Hemon writes, “The bathroom
walls were daubed over with various venereal diseases; the lines between the
tiles brimmed with unspeakable ecosystems.”
The image may be yucky, but the metaphors are marvelous.
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
MOTHERS AND SONS by Adam Haslett
Peter Fischer is a lonely gay immigration lawyer who specializes in asylum cases, many of which involve persecution for sexual orientation. Until now, Peter has avoided cases involving gay immigrants, possibly because they force him to dredge up his own past. His relationship with his lesbian mother, a former priest who now co-owns a women’s retreat in Vermont, is strained. Theirs is just one of several mother/son relationships that support the book title. We also have Vasel, Peter’s first gay client, whose mother helped get him out of Albania but whom Vasel cannot ask for a letter confirming his homosexuality. Another client is Sandra, whose son Felipe is terrified that she will be deported back to Honduras and leave him alone in the U.S. Last but not least is Peter’s sister, Liz, whose 4-year-old son, Charlie, whom she adores, is still not completely potty-trained. Despite the peaceful tone of this book, its subject matter is anything but peaceful. I would say that it is an uncomfortable, squirm-inducing read with several violent backstories. I also found it baffling at times. How can a traumatized teenager whose mother is a priest not receive any sort of counseling?
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Y/N by Esther Yi
Sometimes I read a book, and I think, “Really?” This is one of those books. This is not the worst book I’ve ever read,
but it’s way down there. I don’t even
know how to classify this book, because it’s so nonsensical. Borderline fantasy, maybe. The unnamed first-person narrator is a
twenty-something woman living in Berlin. She becomes obsessed with Moon
(“mooning” over him), a member of a Korean boy band called the pack of
boys. She writes a fictional story about
him, using the placeholder Y/N, so that the reader can insert “Your Name” for
the person in a relationship with Moon. When Moon decides to step back from the
band in real life, the narrator travels to Seoul on a quest to find him. She eventually tracks him to a convalescent
home called the Sanctuary where she sees a boy who looks like Moon. Here’s her thought process, from page 154:
“In fact, his resemblance possibly proved he wasn’t
Moon. Similarity precluded
equivalence: If the boy were Moon, I’d
never say he looked like Moon, just like I’d never say that I looked like
myself.”
This odd deductive logic is my favorite passage in the book,
but it’s a good example of how weird the whole thing is. On the plus side, the cover art is stunning,
but you know what they say: You can’t
judge a book by . . . .
Monday, August 25, 2025
BIOGRAPHY OF X by Catherine Lacey
X is a fictional artist and author with a mysterious past and more pseudonyms than you can count on both hands. Her biographer is C.M. Lucca, a journalist and X’s widow. The backdrop is alternative history, like Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America. In 1945, as imagined here, the U.S. was divided into the Southern, Northern, and Western Territories. The Southern Territory, as you might guess, was extremely right-wing, and X was a rare escapee whose multiple identities helped her evade authorities. Fact and fiction overlap in odd ways here, as X became friends with David Bowie, Connie Converse, and Susan Sontag, to name a few real-life notables. Some fictional elements seem to be intentionally outrageous, with real people in different roles with different ideologies, such as the naming of Ronald Reagan as a Green Party presidential candidate. These humorous asides don’t quite redeem this novel, though, in which Lucca seems to be so much in X’s thrall, even eight years after X’s death, as to be a bit pathetic. She completely subjugates herself to X, even abandoning her career, which she may be resurrecting by setting the record straight about X’s history. X is a woman beloved by many, but I didn’t find her the least bit lovable. She’s definitely enigmatic, disappearing for weeks without explanation, expecting Lucca to carry on in her absence. Most of the remarks that Lucca quotes X as saying are completely incomprehensible and borderline nonsensical. The photos scattered throughout are a treat, though, and this could be one of those books where it’s more fun to look at the pictures than to read it.
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