Showing posts with label Noah Hawley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noah Hawley. Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2012

Explaining the unexplainable

The Good Father
by Noah Hawley


Dr. Paul Allen is a good man.  As Noah Hawley’s novel opens, he is enjoying the family tradition of shouting out Jeopardy questions with his wife and twin sons.  The game is interrupted by breaking news.  The Democratic candidate—the presumed next President of the United States—has just been shot at a public rally.  The coverage is chaotic, with reports and footage coming in from a variety of sources.  Finally, some images of the shooter come up on the screen.  It’s Daniel, Paul’s 20-year-old son from his first marriage.  So begins a nightmare.

I think this premise alone is enough to intrigue most readers.  We’ve experienced these atrocities, seen the breaking news coverage, hoped for the best.  Who hasn’t spared just a moment to think of the people who love the perpetrators of these crimes?  Just because your child turns out to be a monster, doesn’t mean you stop loving them.

Within moments, Secret Service agents have shown up at Dr. Allen’s door.  He is taken in for questioning.  They need to know everything about Daniel.  He is shot, in custody, and branded as a terrorist.  Paul is in shock and in denial.  Yes, he’s seen the footage of his son with gun in hand, but he knows that Danny didn’t do it.  As events unfold, Danny refuses to speak or defend himself, so it falls to his father.  But Dr. Allen is a diagnostician, and even as he consistently proclaims his son’s innocence, he mentally searches for the trauma that broke him.

This novel is about the people on the periphery of a terrible act.  It’s about the toll a child’s action takes not only on the parent, but on the entire family.  The story is realistic, honest, and utterly compelling.  Though flawed, Paul is a hugely sympathetic protagonist, even as he’s being reviled by the world.  And while it is clear as day that this loving father is grasping at straws to save his child, at a certain point you have to wonder if these anomalies he finds don’t add up to something more ominous.  And at that point, a wonderful family drama becomes significantly more suspenseful.  These questions will have you turning pages until you finally get the entire story.  Mr. Hawley does a superlative tying up all lose ends, whether plot-related or emotional. 

This is a very contemporary story set in a realistic world most of us know all too well.  The shootings of figures like Gabby Gifford, Ronald Reagan, and Robert Kennedy aren’t merely acknowledged, they’re dissected.  Noah Hawley has tried to explain that which is essentially unexplainable.  It’s extraordinary how well he succeeds.  This novel works brilliantly on all levels.  The writing is very strong without being unnecessarily showy.  Each character, no matter how minor, is imbued with details that bring them to life.  The human drama at the heart of this tale is both heart-breaking and healing.  This is, in short, a flat-out fantastic novel.  Read it!

Monday, October 3, 2011

Mailbox Monday: The On Top of October Edition




You know, it's getting to the point that I feel having a plain old mailbox is inexcusably boring...

So, no big literary news on this end.  I think the highlight of last week was going out to see an advance screening of the remake of Footloose with a bunch of friends Friday night.  Not very literary, but surprisingly enjoyable!  It was like being 15 again. 

I think this will also be a quiet week for lit events--until Litquake starts on Sunday with an awesome fairy picnic!  Let's hope for good weather!  The following week, I've got lit events that I could attend every night--depending on my energy and stamina.  Sometimes even I need an evening off.  But there should be some fun stuff to report in the near future.  And on that note...

Reamde
by Neal Stephenson
Release date: September 20, 2011
Source: Finished hardback from publisher

I couldn't get past page three of Anathem, but this is much more up my alley.  In fact, I read all 1,000+ pages in about 3 days.  OMG, what a rollicking good time I had!

Wishes & Stitches
by Rachel Herron
Release date: October 11, 2011
Source: Finished trade paperback from publisher

This will go to a knitter in my life.  Is this something you'd like to see given away on the blog?

Falling Together
by Marisa de los Santos
Release date: October 28, 2011
Source: Finished hardback from publisher

I recall de los Santo's debut novel, Love Walked In being pleasant enough.  Truthfully, my expectations for this novel aren't super high, but not every novel needs to be brilliant.  Some can be merely entertaining and pass the time.  This will probably fit the bill when the mood strikes.

The Cat's Table
by Michael Ondaatje
Release date: October 4, 2011
Source: The Amazon Vine program

Ondaatje is another novelist that sadly I've not read before.  Jon says his writing is gorgeous, but I have to admit the description of the novel's shipboard plot is what grabbed me.

The Technologists
by Matthew Pearl
Release date: February 21, 2012
Source: The Amazon Vine program

Pearl's debut novel has been sitting on my shelf unread for many years--not through any lack of interest on my part.  And each subsequent novel has caught my eye.  But it looks like I'll finally read him with this forthcoming release.  Like his other novels, this is a period thriller.  The description of this novel makes it sound like a science thriller solved by the members of MIT's first graduating past.  That just sounds delicious.

The Good Father
by Noah Hawley
Release date: March 20, 2012
Source: Electronic galley from publisher

While not an original premise (We Need To Talk About Kevin), this is always an intriguing one to me.  It's about the experience of the parent of an (adult) child who commits an unimaginable crime.  In this case, this eponymous father's son is caught on video attempting a political assassination.  Can't wait to read this, but given that it won't be released until spring, it probably will wait a while.

The Dressmaker
by Kate Alcott
Release date: February 21, 2012
Source: Electronic galley from publisher

There can never be too many Titanic novels.  Am I right?

The Dovekeepers
by Alice Hoffman
Release date: October 4, 2011
Source: Electronic galley from publisher

Did anyone happen to notice that I'm trying to give away a free copy of this high-profile soon-to-be-best-seller?  I'm thinking, "no."  Putting aside my own complex response to this novel, it's getting rave reviews.  For this reason, I'm going to extend the deadline on last week's giveaway.  Please post a comment to the linked giveaway by Wednesday, October 12th for a chance to win.  I urge you to enter, as the odds are in your favor!


Books finished in the last week:

The Revisionists by Thomas Mullen
Reamde by Neal Stephenson
The Visible Man by Chuck Klosterman
The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman

This was a hefty reading week.  I'd guess about 2,000 pages.  That's certainly not unprecedented.  I don't even know how unusual it is, but it feels more like an accomplishment when a single title is over 1,000 pages long.  I'm not sure why that is.

The Visible Man by Chuck Klosterman sort of snuck up on me.  It was one of the books I was most excited about acquiring at BEA, but the on-sale date was so far off that I put off reading it in lieu of books coming out sooner.  Suddenly I noticed the other day that it goes on sale tomorrow.  So, I had to fit it in over the weekend.

What an interesting novelist Mr. Klosterman is turning out to be!  I haven't read his journalism or non-fiction, but I loved his uproarious debut novel, Downtown Owl.  When I saw him at BEA, I asked if this latest would be in a similar vein.  On the contrary, it's not a comic novel, but very, very interesting.  I have no idea what I will write in a review...

Currently reading:

To be determined.  I might just watch Terra Nova tonight, LOL.  

So, what books have you guys acquired?  What are you reading?  Pleas let us know in the comments!