Showing posts with label Anthony Cummins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Cummins. Show all posts

Monday, September 23, 2024

Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner review – double dealing in deepest France

 



BOOK OF THE WEEK

Review

Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner review – double dealing in deepest France

Longlisted for this year’s Booker prize, Kushner’s cleverly paced tale of espionage, narrated by a ‘wild and boastful’ agent provocateur, juggles a killer plot with anarchy, agriculture and prehistory, making for her most entertaining novel yet

Anthony Cummins
25 August 2024

Radical politics, mixed-up heroines and the threat of violence are staple ingredients in the fiction of Rachel Kushner, who began to be spoken of as one of the century’s great American novelists with her second book, The Flamethrowers (2013), about a biker in the art world of 70s New York and Italy during the “years of lead”. But even though her third novel, The Mars Room, set among women serving life in a California prison, was shortlisted for the Booker prize in 2018, I’m not convinced she’s truly on the radar of most readers this side of the Atlantic, where we’re warier of the vast, chiselled, ideas-packed tales ambitious American writers are less likely to shy away from.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

The Bee Sting by Paul Murray review / Master of the generation game

 

‘The spectre of environmental catastrophe’: Dickie builds an underground bunker in post-crash Ireland. 


The Bee Sting by Paul Murray review – master of the generation game


Murray’s brilliant new novel, about a rural Irish clan, is pure pleasure and posits the author as Dublin’s answer to Jonathan Franzen

Anthony Cummins
Sunday 4 June 2023

Irish author Paul Murray made his debut in 2003 (An Evening of Long Goodbyes) but didn’t find wider attention until his second book, 2010’s boarding school comedy Skippy Dies. Next came The Mark and the Void (2015), a post-crash metafiction involving a writer by the name of Paul. His brilliant new novel lays a plausible claim to Murray being Dublin’s answer to Jonathan Franzen. A 650-page slab of compulsive high-grade entertainment, The Bee Sting is a sharply written family soap opera that oozes pathos while being very funny to boot.

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Percival Everett: ‘I’d love to write a novel everyone hated’

Percival Everett photographed in South Pasadena, California, in March 2022. Photograph: Dan Tuffs/




Percival Everett: ‘I’d love to write a novel everyone hated’


The American novelist on his stereotyping of white characters, the breadth of the black experience in modern literature, and why he always returns to The Way of All Flesh

Anthony Cummins
Saturday 12 March 2022



Percival Everett, 65, is the author of 21 novels, including Glyph, a satire on literary theory, Telephone, which was published simultaneously in three different versions, and Erasure, about a black author who, angered by expectations of what African American fiction ought to look like, adopts a pseudonym to write a parodically gritty (and wildly successful) novel called My Pafology. The New Yorker has called Everett “cool, analytic and resolutely idiosyncratic… he excels at the unblinking execution of extraordinary conceits”. His new book, The Trees, is a twisted detective novel centred on a spate of grisly, seemingly supernatural murders of white people in modern-day Mississippi. He spoke from Los Angeles, where he teaches at the University of Southern California.

Sunday, January 23, 2022

Winter by Karl Ove Knausgaard review / From cotton buds to sex as cannibalism




Winter by Karl Ove Knausgaard review – from cotton buds to sex as cannibalism


The second volume of the bestselling author’s seasonal musings meander between the laughable and the sublime


Anthony Cummins
Tue 21 Nov ‘17 09.00 GMT



I
Autumn, Karl Ove Knausgaard mused on whatever came to mind during his (now ex) wife’s pregnancy with their fourth chid, Anne. Winter, the second in a quick-fire seasonal quartet published in Norwegian two years ago, repeats the formula for the run-up to her birth early in 2014, with 60 prose pieces between two and five pages long on everything from cotton buds to the 1970s and “hollow spaces”.

Saturday, October 30, 2021

The Promise by Damon Galgut review / A curse down the decades


 


BOOK OF THE DAY

The Promise by Damon Galgut review – a curse down the decades

This bravura novel about the undoing of a bigoted South African family during apartheid deserves awards


Analysis / The 2021 Booker shortlist tunes in to the worries of our age

Nadifa Mohamed is sole British writer to make Booker prize shortlist

Booker Prize 2021 shortlist unveiled as race for £50,000 prize hots up


Anthony Cummins
Tue 8 Jun 2021 07.00 BST

D

amon Galgut’s stunning new novel charts the decline of a white family during South Africa’s transition out of apartheid. It begins in 1986, with the death of Rachel, a 40-year-old Jewish mother of three on a smallholding outside Pretoria. The drama of the novel turns on a promise that her Afrikaner husband, Manie, made to her before she died, overheard by their youngest daughter, Amor: that Manie would give their black maid, Salome, the deeds to the annexe she occupies. Now that Rachel is dead, Manie has apparently forgotten and doesn’t care to be reminded. Nor does his bigoted family, who regard Amor’s stubborn insistence that Salome should own her home as the kind of talk that “now appears to have infected the whole country”.

Thursday, October 14, 2021

No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood review / Richly tragicomic debut novel

 

Patricia Lockwood


No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood review – richly tragicomic debut novel

Satire and heartache collide in the Priestdaddy author’s funny portrait of a woman’s real and online life


Anthony Cummins
Monday 8 February 2021


P

atricia Lockwood’s 2017 memoir Priestdaddy was, on the face of it, the story of a comically eccentric Catholic upbringing in midwest America. But it also recounted a life shaped just as forcefully by the internet, where Lockwood found an education (after her family stopped her going to university), a husband, and a break: the autobiographical poem Rape Joke, from a 2012 collection issued by a small indie press, went viral only when an online magazine ran it a year later – at which point a poetry editor at Penguin suddenly remembered he had one of Lockwood’s manuscripts sitting on his desk.

Patricia Locwood

In 2019 Lockwood published a third-person diary of what she half-jokingly called her mental “disintegration” as a result of spending too much time on Twitter, or “the portal”, ever more grimly addictive in the wake of Trump’s election. Delivered as a lecture at the British Museum before being printed in the London Review of Books, it took the form of a feed-like stream of quasi-satirical reflections on the oddities of online life, as experienced by a Lockwood-adjacent “she” who finds herself sought after as an authority on internet culture, thanks to her much-circulated social media post: “Can a dog be twins?”

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Whereabouts by Jhumpa Lahiri review / Hypnotic disappearing act



 

Whereabouts by Jhumpa Lahiri review – hypnotic disappearing act

An unnamed woman in an unnamed city wavers between solitude and brief encounters in a spare examination of alienation

Anthony Cummins
Mon 26 Apr 2021 07.00 BST

W

hen Jhumpa Lahiri published her previous novel, 2013’s The Lowland, a wide-angled family saga centred on the Naxalite uprising in 60s Bengal, she was known chiefly as a writer of cross-cultural dislocation. With The Namesake (2003), a novel about a Bengali-American child who rejects his origins, and two story collections, including her Pulitzer-winning debut, 1999’s Interpreter of Maladies, she anticipated a US vogue for fiction that viewed American culture through the eyes of another. Yet Lahiri, born in London and raised in Rhode Island by parents from Kolkata, was sceptical of that brand: asked in an interview about “immigrant novels”, she observed that, in literature, “the tension between alienation and assimilation has always been a basic theme”.

Friday, January 8, 2021

Tyll by Daniel Kehlmann review / Plague, war and practical jokes

 


BOOKS OF THE YEAR

BOOK OF THE DAY

Tyll by Daniel Kehlmann review – plague, war and practical jokes


The talented Austro-German has created a dazzling, picaresque romp but he squanders the potential of his best character
Anthony Cummins
Tue 18 Feb 2020 07.00 GMT

T

ime and again, Daniel Kehlmann’s novels feature an artist whose success depends on leaving his wife and children. (His last book broke with the formula to follow a harassed screenwriter on holiday with his family; it’s called You Should Have Left.) The creative travails of men, and the collateral damage they inflict, may not seem a surefire draw for book-buyers, yet Kehlmann, who writes in German, is translated into more than 40 languages – he’s fun to read, and his books travel light, uncluttered by cultural references.

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

The Liar's Dictionary by Eley Williams review / A glorious way with words

 



BOOKS OF THE YEAR

The Liar's Dictionary by Eley Williams review – a glorious way with words


Williams’s debut novel, a tale of two lexicographers, is a playful delight

Anthony Cummins
Tue 14 July 2020


I

don’t know if any of the newspaper fiction previews that appeared at the end of 2016 tipped Eley Williams’s first collection, Attrib. and Other Stories, published by independent press Influx, as a book to look out for. But 12 months later, it was all over the end-of-year roundups – a deserved sleeper hit that made sparks fly by dint of sheer wordplay, as Williams’s fretful, philosophically inclined narrators zero in on passed-over nuances of language.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

The 10 best books of 2019 / Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli / Review by Anthony Cummins



Th10 best books of  

2019

Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli – review


A squabbling US couple set out to document the Mexican migrant crisis in Luiselli’s cautious attempt at introducing autofiction to the real world



Anthony Cummins
Sunday 3 March 2019


A
common criticism of autofiction is that it doesn’t get out enough. You could see Valeria Luiselli’s teasingly autobiographical new novel, about American border crises past and present, as an attempt to square the circle, enjoying autofiction’s perks – the freedom from clunky scene-setting; the flexibility to be essayistic as well as dramatic – while avoiding accusations of solipsism by targeting an issue of unimpeachable urgency.

Taking the form of a travelogue centred on a road trip from New York City to the Mexican border, the book was begun in 2014, when tens of thousands of migrants from Mexico and Central America crossed into the US. Its unnamed narrator, who shares much in common with Luiselli herself, reflects on the ethics of storytelling while setting out to document children going missing while trying to enter America.


With her husband, a soundscape artist on his own quest to retrace the steps of the last Native Americans conquered by European settlers, she sets off with their two children from past relationships, a 10-year-old son (his) and a five-year-old daughter (hers).






Their awkward questions about refugees and the brutality of US history add energy to the wandering narrative, as do the regular bouts of marital spite, with the narrator’s husband portrayed as a pretentious blowhard who winds her up even in his sleep, “so calm in his nasty, guiltless dreams”.



The narrator, by contrast, tends to be all swooning sensitivity, imagining people in their homes “reading, sleeping, fucking, crying, watching television” as she drives by night across Arkansas. Her empathy doesn’t always survive actual human contact; in Oklahoma, she observes a mother “with a face and arms the texture of boiled chicken” feed her toddler “long fries dripped first in ketchup, then in mayonnaise” while talking about “price discounts in the local supermarket”, the child replying with “inhuman burbles and shrieks”.


Valeria Luiselli



When the narrator learns of a looming deportation flight, it injects longed-for impetus, but the race to intercept the plane ends only with her lashing out at a wire fence separating her from the airfield. There’s pathos here, but maybe not quite how Luiselli intends; it gets hard not to crave a bit of the chutzpah on show in a more conventional social problem novel such as Rachel Kushner’s recent The Mars Room, which simply rolls up its sleeves to brazen out the difficulty of imagining its way into prison life.
Luiselli’s more cautious approach – her narrator muses on whether she “can or should make art with someone else’s suffering” and talks us through the underlinings in her copy of Susan Sontag’s journals – may be more honest but its insights are moot, especially when the noodling ends up having to go toe to toe with the bald facts of “migrant mortality reports” inserted into the narrative, describing children found dead from exposure in the desert. When the narrator agonises over “the best way to tell the story”, you can’t help but feel Luiselli already figured it out in Tell Me How It Ends, a nonfiction book based on her experience interpreting for child migrants held by the US.

Valeria Luiselli

In the end, Lost Children Archive runs out of steam and has to change tack, switching perspective to the narrator’s stepson as he plans to run away, as if becoming a lost child himself might make him more interesting to his mother.
The episode might have fuelled the novel all by itself, but in selling this very different story in the shape of another, Luiselli, almost despite herself, seems to fall into the trap of thinking the personal isn’t political enough.
 Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli is published by 4th Estate (£16.99).