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THE FOLDED WORLD

Gaige’s off-beat orientation, wit and piercing insights stand up to her first novel, this time in a more sober and less tidy...

An idyllic marriage is tested in this idiosyncratic examination of how the experience of love, its absence and its presence, can shape lives.

Gaige was honored as one of the National Book Foundation’s “5 [exceptional authors] under 35” for her debut, O My Darling (2005). Her second time around again showcases a gift for capturing the simultaneous proximity and distance in a relationship. But this darker story connects the romance of coupledom to the territory of madness. The lovers, Alice and Charlie, are both the products of their upbringings: she, the bookish daughter of a disappointed single mother; he, the likable, talented golden child of “wonderful, clear presences.” Charlie’s ambition—to be “good”—leads him to a career in social work, but his innocent impulses cause problems in his charmed life, which has been further graced by the birth of twin girls. Her husband’s staying at work late leaves Alice lonely and mistrustful, while overstepping professional boundaries imperils both Charlie’s clients and his career. Mania stalks the characters in many forms, some abstract, others tangible. The sense of threat that hangs over the proceedings is fed by Charlie’s grandmother’s premonition of violence, yet in a gathering whirlwind of a conclusion, the author dodges expectations, while reaching grandly for a multiple vision of love and restoration.

Gaige’s off-beat orientation, wit and piercing insights stand up to her first novel, this time in a more sober and less tidy narrative that offers greater breadth in exchange for sweetness.

Pub Date: May 1, 2007

ISBN: 1-59051-248-0

Page Count: 300

Publisher: Other Press

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2007

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THE EASTER PARADE

With the recent publication of Yates’s complete stories (p. 273), there’s a concerted effort to restore all the work of this writer’s writer (who died in 1992) to print. This melancholy tale of two sisters begins, like so many Yates narratives, with high hopes for its characters—expectations that are usually dashed by experience. When it first appeared in 1976, Kirkus noted that “nobody sings sadder songs of the way things were” than Yates, and by the novel’s end, he makes “an effective shambles” of his protagonists’ “muffed lives.” Though they begin in youth and gladness, these sisters’ lives end in despondency and sadness. Kirkus celebrated Yates’s strong suit, “the thing he knows best—failure.” Its gravity “gives all his books their vulnerability and makes them imperative then and now reading for many people.” And now again.

Pub Date: May 6, 2001

ISBN: 0-312-27828-4

Page Count: 229

Publisher: Picador

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2001

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THE GOOD LORD BIRD

McBride presents an interesting experiment in point of view here, as all of Brown’s activities are filtered through the eyes...

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In McBride’s version of events, John Brown’s body doesn’t lie a-mouldering in the grave—he’s alive and vigorous and fanatical and doomed, so one could say his soul does indeed go marching on.

The unlikely narrator of the events leading up to Brown’s quixotic raid at Harpers Ferry is Henry Shackleford, aka Little Onion, whose father is killed when Brown comes in to liberate some slaves. Brown whisks the 12-year-old away thinking he’s a girl, and Onion keeps up the disguise for the next few years. This fluidity of gender identity allows Onion a certain leeway in his life, for example, he gets taken in by Pie, a beautiful prostitute, where he witnesses some activity almost more unseemly than a 12-year-old can stand. The interlude with Pie occurs during a two-year period where Brown disappears from Onion’s life, but they’re reunited a few months before the debacle at Harpers Ferry. In that time, Brown visits Frederick Douglass, and, in the most implausible scene in the novel, Douglass gets tight and chases after the nubile Onion. The stakes are raised as Brown approaches October 1859, for even Onion recognizes the futility of the raid, where Brown expects hundreds of slaves to rise in revolt and gets only a handful. Onion notes that Brown’s fanaticism increasingly approaches “lunacy” as the time for the raid gets closer, and Brown never loses that obsessive glint in his eye that tells him he’s doing the Lord’s work. At the end, Onion reasserts his identity as a male and escapes just before Brown’s execution.

McBride presents an interesting experiment in point of view here, as all of Brown’s activities are filtered through the eyes of a young adolescent who wavers between innocence and cynicism.

Pub Date: Aug. 20, 2013

ISBN: 978-1-59448-634-0

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Riverhead

Review Posted Online: May 12, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2013

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