Check it out
Identifying a literary work as a classic in its own time is dicey
business, since by definition a classic has already endured the test of
time. Yet critics routinely take leaps of faith when they name
contemporary classics in “Magill’s Literary Annual” -- the source of
Newport Beach Public Library’s newest collection of Timeless Treasures.
Called “Looking Back on the ‘90s,” the retrospective of the past decade
features numerous works that offer a glimpse of other cultures, including
“Consider This, Senora,” Harriet Doerr’s elegantly rendered story about
American expatriates experiencing love, loss and renewal in a remote
Mexican village.
In her second enchanting novel, the author of “Stones for Ibarra” peers
into the souls of Sue, an artist reaching for perspective; Bud, running
from the IRS; Frances, writer of a romantic travel guide; and Ursula, a
widow who wants to regain “the brilliant patchwork of her ... past.”
A syncopated beat inspires the prose of “Texaco,” a fictional history of
the Caribbean underclass in the century-and-a-half since the abolition of
slavery. Through narrator Marie-Sophie, a daughter of slaves, Patrick
Chamoiseau chronicles 150 years on Martinique, starting with
Marie-Sophie’s beloved father’s birth on a sugar plantation and ending
with her founding Texaco, a shanty town built on the grounds of an island
oil refinery.
For readers who go for baroque, Iain Pears serves up a murder mystery
powered as much by ideas as by suspects, autopsies and smoking guns in
“An Instance of the Fingerpost.” Set in Oxford, England, in 1663, the
intricate plot centers around a university professor’s murder -- an
incident that provides a fulcrum for an exploration of truth, Restoration
politics and 17th century mores.
American social fabric is the stuff of which Jane Smiley’s “The All-True
Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton” is woven. Set in Kansas in the
mid-1850s, the action involves the bitter split between abolitionist and
pro-slavery factions that turns Kansas Territory into a battleground of
the Civil War to come.
“Dewey Defeats Truman,” a famous headline of 1948, is also the title of
Thomas Mallon’s gently comic novel about a love triangle involving an
up-and-coming Republican, a disheveled Democratic and an aspiring
novelist. While evoking the feel of a bygone era, the story makes clever
use of historical research and smoothly interweaves public and private
events.
When history becomes too heavy and you’re ready for a funny, moving and
readable romp through the devastation of divorce, check out “Nothing But
Blue Skies,” Thomas McGuane’s spirited novel about the male psyche under
stress. On center stage is Frank Copenhaver, an errant yet debonair loser
who finds himself in a tailspin of yearning, bad investments, and old
grudges when his wife suddenly leaves him.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Sara Barnicle.
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