| |
|
| |
|
|
by Jonathan Lethem
In a word (or two or three): detective novel in hipsterville? nah.
From Mr. Hipster:
It's as if my subconscious didn't want
me to finish this one. I was about three-quarters of the way through
when I left it on a bus on the way home. Never expecting to see it
again, I started on a new novel and put it out of my mind. And then
my anal nature got the best of me... I called the bus joint just to
check, and lo and behold; they had it. I do have to say that getting
back into the story was relatively easy, as the characters were pretty
clear cut, and the narrative linear and pretty typical. It wasn't
what I was expecting after reading The
Fortress of Solitude. This one was quirky and relatively fun,
but quite a but lighter than Fortress. Based around the main
character, Lionel Essrog, whose Tourette's is almost the main character
itself, the story follows him and a small group of his fellow Brooklyn
orphans who have been adopted into a street-level petty crime organization
by Frank Minna, who turns into a mentor of sorts of all of them. Eventually
they graduate into adulthood, and from petty crime into the detective
business. Legit or not, they follow Frank to the ends of Earth until
he is killed during one of their missions. They must then become real
detectives to help uncover the mystery of his murder. Lionel's Tourretic
and OCDish behavior drives the plot forward, adding good touches of
humor throughout, but also presenting a completely different way of
approaching what would otherwise be a pretty blah mystery story. I
swear the ticks were so well integrated into the story that there
were times where I felt like I was catching some of Lionel's syndrome.
So in terms of the actual storyline, it did move forward briskly,
and was compelling in the way a midrange John Grisham novel might
be, but it was the Lionel character that really separated it from
the genre. It was hard to know how to feel about the guy, as he seemed
aware of his condition and how it might affect others, but was unwilling
to curb his behavior. Despite his bizarre obsessiveness, he is one
of the more sympathetic characters I've seen of late, and is certainly
one of those characters every actor would kill to play in the screen
adaptation (although it looks like Ed Norton will get the chance).
It'll be interesting to read Lethem's next novel to see if he continues
in the Fortress way, or kind of sticks with something like
this Chabon-like story-based character study.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
The
Fortress of Solitude |
|
| |
|
|
Home
| Booze & Grub | Movies
| Music | Books
| Diary
| Randomness
|
|
| |
|