Patti's Pages
Taking Looks at Books
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
WHAT WE CAN KNOW by Ian McEwan
Critics didn’t dub this author Ian Macabre for nothing, and
this book solidifies that reputation.
For the first 150 pages, the highbrow plot treads water as Thomas
Metcalfe in 2120 narrates his search for a lost poem from 2014. Not much has changed in 100 years except that
a bunch of landmasses and species of flora and fauna have disappeared, thanks
to climate change upheaval and a tsunami caused by a manmade screw-up. The missing
poem’s celebrated author read the poem, an homage to his wife, at a dinner
party and insisted that there be no other copies. The poem was a gift, and his wife could do
with it as she pleased. No one has seen
it since. The poet’s wife was a
published author herself but abandoned her writing career to become basically a
tradwife. Finally, our first half
narrator, Thomas rediscovers a forgotten note in his coat pocket, and things
start to get rolling. His tedious search
for the lost poem morphs from an archive search to a more literal hunt for
buried treasure. Part II is something
else entirely, but readers will recognize the narrator and the other characters
from the 21st century dinner party.
This is where the storyline indeed becomes macabre, and a lost boy in a
train station is just a tiny warmup for what is to come. Unfortunately, some readers will probably
abandon this book before they get to the good stuff.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
THE SAFEKEEP by Yael van der Wouden
Isabel lives alone in her family home in the Netherlands in
1961. She has a sharp tongue and doesn’t
mind using it, even with strangers like her older brother’s new girlfriend,
Eva. When her brother has to leave the
country for a month on business, he insists that Eva stay with Isabel. Isabel can’t really object, although she does
try, because she has no claim to the house, which will eventually belong to her
brother. For the first two weeks these
two women are like oil and vinegar, but then things change when Isabel comes in
from a date and describes her discomfort with the whole evening. Their détente segues into desire for one
another that both view as forbidden, although Isabel’s younger brother lives
with his male lover. This development, however, is not the most jaw-dropping
aspect of the novel. A startling disclosure--well
past halfway through the novel--changes the whole timbre of the book, rewarding
your patience for sticking with it. This
book may not be a thriller, but it definitely has a twist that I did not see
coming. I failed to pick up on several
clues that could have prepared me for the unexpected revelation, and I was glad
to have an electronic copy so that I could go back and search the pages I had
already read. The manner in which the
plot unfolds is exquisite.
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
BEAUTYLAND by Marie-Helene Bertino
Adina is secretly an extra-terrestrial in a human body, born
to a human mother, and has been sent to report on the life of earthlings. She
communicates with her alien people by fax surreptitiously. Her communiques are filled with keen observations,
although occasionally she draws an errant but humorous conclusion. She sends wise reflections on irrational
human behaviors, customs, and beliefs to her superiors, but their replies are
terse and not exactly encouraging. Even
so, Adina longs to fit in with her human counterparts but is an alien in
numerous ways. When asked to report on a
sporting event, she describes the grass, the players, their interactions with
the coaches, but nothing about the outcome.
Her response to her exasperated editor is that everyone knows the
outcome, and her readers surprisingly agree.
Adina eventually discovers that her missives to another world are of
interest to her fellow humans on Earth, and she receives a more positive
response from her human audience than she ever received via fax. One thing that
I did not like about this book is the format.
I prefer traditional chapter breaks, but this novel, although the
timeline is sequential, has a break every few paragraphs, making it feel a
little choppy to me. Still, I found
Adina’s story tender and hopeful about humankind in a way that Theo
of Golden is not. It also
does what Orbital
failed to do, which is move you.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
BAD BAD GIRL by Gish Jen
If you think that Gish Jen’s novel about her mother will be
a loving homage, guess again. Her mother
endured the Japanese occupation of Shanghai during WWII, then emigrated, by
herself, to the U.S. after college, and obtained her master’s degree. She then got married before completing her
dissertation for her PhD and raised five children, with Gish being the second,
following her brother Reuben. However,
Gish’s memories of her mother, who died in her 90s during Covid, are anything
but fond. While Gish was a child, her
mother beat her regularly. Even as an
adult, Gish was constantly seeking attagirls from her mother, but none were
forthcoming. Gish’s mantra seems to be
“Look what I did for you, and you didn’t even thank me.” Then there’s Gish’s “beloved father,” also
Chinese, who beat her with a metal stake to the point that the injuries kept
her out of gym class for three months. I
cannot fathom why she adored him. There
was one humorous anecdote where Gish and a female classmate lobbied to be
allowed to take shop in school. They
were granted the concession of being able to use the shop after class, and the
shop teacher is a riot. However, this
one incident does not salvage this otherwise very depressing novel. I suppose that writing this novel was cathartic
and validating for the author, but reading it was not a pleasant experience.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
THE REFORMATORY by Tananarive Due
Like The
Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead, this novel takes place at a
Florida reform school for boys. It’s
1950, and the KKK terrorizes Black people, and their children can land in the
notorious Gracetown School, based on the real Dozier School, for minor
scuffles, like kicking a white boy.
Robert Stephens is 12 years old and has been in the care of his
16-year-old sister since their father, a union organizer and civil rights
activist, has had to flee to Chicago.
Young Robert’s sentence at the reformatory is supposed to be only six
months, but his father’s reputation marks him for bullying by both the other
students and the administration. His
ability to see the ghosts of the boys who have died there earns him a potential
reprieve, but “catching haints” has its own set of consequences. If he fails to deliver, he will be whipped,
left in a shed overnight, and be raped by the headmaster, but Robert feels a
kinship with the ghosts, who don’t want to be turned to dust and collected in
the headmaster’s jar. His dilemma drives
him to a dangerous decision that drives the most gripping part of the
book. The gruesome tortures that the
boys endure are not recounted in such a way as to give the reader nightmares,
but they certainly left me hoping that the evil men would get their due. Sadly,
the administrators of the real Dozier School never paid a price for their
cruelty and for the deaths of the boys whose lives they cut short.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
GODWIN by Joseph O'Neill
An elusive African soccer phenom, dubbed Godwin, barely
appears in the novel, other than in black and white soundless video. In fact, the first section of the novel is
about a cooperative of technical writers in Pittsburgh with two women as
co-leads, Annie and Lakesha. Mark, a
member of the co-op, gets into a scuffle with office security, and takes some
accrued time off. Timing is everything,
ass his half-brother, Geoff, hoodwinks Mark into coming to Europe to help with
a business opportunity. Why not? Except that Geoff is sleazy and unreliable,
not to mention broke. Mark is obviously
being taken for a ride at his own expense.
This is where the soccer video surfaces, as Geoff wants to find Godwin
and become his agent. This tale morphs
into a wild goose chase of epic proportions with a side dish of dirty office politics
involving a proxy fight at the co-op.
These two storylines are equally compelling, although a French soccer
agent’s longwinded account of the quest to find Godwin is a little too
detailed. Do we care that Godwin’s
hunting skills are just as astonishing as his soccer skills? How the co-op and soccer plotlines converge
at the end is a very pleasant surprise.
I found this book to be a refreshing break from the usual family drama
and romantic liaisons. There actually is
some family drama here, but not in the usual sense and not as the main
attraction.
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
LONG ISLAND by Colm Tóibín
You don’t have to have read Brooklyn
to enjoy this novel, but it helps. This
novel takes place two decades later, and Eilis’s husband, Tony, has fathered a
child with another woman. That woman’s
husband intends to leave the baby on Eilis’s doorstep after it is born. Eilis is having none of it, vowing never to
raise that child, and makes plans to visit Ireland for her mother’s 80th
birthday. On her previous visit two
decades ago, Eilis and Jim Farrell fell in love, but Eilis left abruptly
because she was already secretly married to Tony. Now the tables are turned, because Jim is
secretly engaged to the widow Nancy Sheridan, Eilis’s former best friend, while
Eilis’s marriage is on the rocks. Talk
about star-crossed lovers! These two
just cannot get their timing right, and their secrets are not helping, either. All would be well with Eilis and Jim, but
Nancy is the fly in the ointment who is already making big plans for after her
wedding. I enjoyed everything about this
love triangle, or quadrangle maybe. I supposed the reader could choose to be on
team Tony or team Jim, but there’s really no contest. I would put Nancy in the role of villain, but
she really isn’t, until she becomes aware that Jim and Eilis still have a thing
for each other. What I did not enjoy was
how the plot eventually just fizzles.
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