Sunday, July 21, 2013

Journeys Back and Forth Through Characters and Chronology

Title: Transatlantic
Author: Colum McCann
Host: Margy

National Book Award-winner Colum McCann spins a masterful web of interlaced novellas in this loosely bound novel of connection between Ireland and America. Moving gracefully between present time and three transatlantic crossings at key moments in history, Transatlantic woos the reader with beautiful prose and fully realized characters.

Alcock and Brown, the first aviators to fly nonstop
across the Atlantic Ocean.
After a brief present-day prologue, we move to a gripping account of Jack Alcock and Arthur Brown's attempt at the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic. Then, it's on to Dublin for Frederick Douglass' lecture tour among the sympathetic Irish. Finally, we join U.S. Senator George Mitchell on his 1998 work at mediating peace in strife-torn Northern Ireland. In each of these stories, we meet women who play a minor role, but are deeply affected by their connections to these three events. These women are the focus of the second half of the novel.


Frederick Douglass

Insights and Opinions

• All agreed that the way the stories overlap and intertwine is powerful, frustrating, rewarding, and heartfelt. The question was posed "is this a new trend?" More and more frequently, we find novels that do not follow the traditional novel arc, with a beginning, middle, and end. Rather, more of today's authors are playing with structure in fiction, knitting together short stories or novellas that share characters, or unplugging stories from their chronology, and stitching them together in a new order.

• At least one of us found the work frustrating for exactly this reason. McCann creates such engaging characters -- people who live and breathe and in whom we are completely invested -- that it's jarring to leave them and move on to somebody else. Any one of these characters could have been the book. We all wanted more time with each of them.

• The Alcock/Brown transatlantic flight chapter is astonishing. Joanne felt this chapter held more energy and commitment from the author than any other chapter in the book. On the other hand, she found the George Mitchell section less engaging.

• McCann's prose is masterful. Powerful sentence fragments. Images that transport. A rhythm to the words that is nearly music. This is beautiful writing -- the perfect gathering of words.

• Vicky pointed out (via email) McCann's ability to clothe historical events in an urgency that makes them seem as if they are happening as we read them. She characterizes him as "a smooth and generous writer."

• At least one of us was hopelessly confused about the letter and why Hannah thought it had anything to do with Frederick Douglass. But since this same person spent one sleepless night trying to reconstruct the chronology of the women and to figure out who was related to whom while flopping about sleeplessly, she should just be ignored as she should have taken notes while reading.

• Hannah is the only voice in the first person. Why is this?

• We spent some time trying to decide what was at the center of the book. Crossings? The women? Certainly not the big events or the great men. Maybe there is no center. Maybe that's fine.

• As a related follow-up, try this article provided by Margy, which seems to confirm our observations about the emergence of a hybrid form of literature, and traces its literary history:


Oddments and Telling Details

• He-man Steve gets a major award for riding his bike to book club in the stifling humidity. Most likely his enthusiasm was due to meeting his August 1 book deadline for Mastering the Craft of Writing: How to Write with Clarity, Emphasis, and Style to be published next spring. Buy it, please.

• We are out of books to read for future meetings, so please come prepared to our next meeting with your suggestions, or feel free to send them ahead of time. The current list of possibles is listed in Under Consideration.

• Mmmm. Cucumber sandwiches.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Call for Book Club Selections

Desperate Times


Due to low attendance, humidity, a bum hearing aid battery, and inability to remember the name of "oh, you know, that book," our July meeting did not generate the usual long list of possible future reads. This is where you come in.

We are so confused
Please submit your suggestions for what we should be reading from September until we run out of ideas. You can submit your ideas as a comment here, or send them by email, or bring them with you to our next session on August 19, 2013.

Thank you for your kind and studious attention.


August's Read: Jewelweed by David Rhodes

From the publisher, Milkweed Editions: "When David Rhodes burst onto the American literary scene in the '70s, he was hailed as a brilliant visionary. In Driftless, his "most accomplished work yet (Joseph Kanon), Rhodes made Words, Wisconsin, resonate with readers across the country. Now with Jewelweed, this beloved author returns to the same out-of-the-way community and introduces a cast of characters who must overcome the burdens left by the past.

After serving time for a dubious conviction, Blake Bookchester is paroled. As Blake attempts to adjust, he reconnects with Danielle Workhouse, a single mother whose son Ivan explores the woods with his precocious friend August. While Danielle goes to work for Buck and Amy Roebuck in their mansion, Ivan and August befriend Lester Mortal, a recluse who lives in a melon field; a wild boy; and a bat, Milton. These characters -- each flawed, deeply human, and ultimately universal -- approach the future with a combination of hope and trepidation. Jewelweed offers a vision in which the ordinary becomes mythical, the seemingly mundane transformed into revelatory beauty.





David Rhodes on life and writing.