Thursday, December 12, 2013

THE QUOTE, THE REVIEW, THE LIST - THURSDAY DECEMBER 12, 2013

A BOOKISH QUOTE

Every book you pick up has its own lesson or lessons, and quite often the bad books have more to teach than the good ones.
-Stephen King


THE REVIEW

GHOST AT THE LOOM
by T. Zachary Cotler

(Kirkus Review)

Poet Cotler’s (Sonnets to the Humans, 2012, etc.) affecting, lyric novel is a long letter from writer Rider Sonnenreich to his sister Leya, its subject nothing less than the mind of an artist.

Both Rider and his sister repeatedly suffered “glimmers” (seizures) as children, and Leya has come to represent something of Rider’s muse, a complicated, ephemeral figure whom he doesn’t wholly understand, yet he’s drawn to her and makes her the subject of his art. She exists mostly in the folds of his memory, though, and readers learn in the opening pages that she has disappeared to Europe, of which Rider remarks: “It’s beautiful enough.” At the behest of his mother, he bums around different European cities, supposedly looking for her but finding instead a variety of bohemians whom he regards like a poet. When he eventually reconnects with her, his memory blends with her present incarnation, which involves dissociation and a bathtub slicked with vomit. Readers looking for a tidy travel narrative should look elsewhere; one scene here takes place in “Gigot’s annex,” full of slightly stoned Italians and expats, and Rider imagines himself there as a boy who would “squat in the corner and cover [his] ears” if given his way. In the same scene, he reveals that he “wouldn’t mind becoming sharper, crazy I mean, not weak-minded crazy. Subtle disconnections.” It’s the voice of a poet in Europe: romantic and sarcastic to the bone, simultaneously jaded and full of wonder. Featuring this kind of overt meditation that’s often on a writer’s mind can be risky, but Cotler pulls it off, injecting feeling into each image, each response, each gesture. It’s no slight to call this a poet’s novel—its narrative thrust is a lyrical one, its strengths are its precision of thought and image, variety of prose and the depth of its meditations. The novel is addressed to the sister, in second person, casting the reader as a voyeur. Or is it really the reader who is addressed, cast as the sister, to whom the poet addresses his interior missives? Cotler stays one step ahead: “Art, I guess, can unintentionally insult the viewer by presuming to include him.”

A beautiful, disturbing portrait of an artist.



Pub Date:Dec. 10th, 2013
ISBN:978-1849822459
Page count:224pp
Publisher:MP Publishing
Program:Kirkus Indie
Review Posted Online:Nov. 29th, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue:Jan. 1st, 2014


THE LIST

Amazon Best Sellers

1. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Hard Luck, Book 8
by Jeff Kinney
2. Things That Matter: Three Decades of Passions, Pastimes and Politics
by Charles Krauthammer
3. Laugh-Out-Loud Jokes for Kids
by Rob Elliott
4. Knock-Knock Jokes for Kids
by Rob Elliott
5. George Washington's Secret Six: The Spy Ring That Saved the American Revolution
by Brian Kilmeade
6. The Day the Crayons Quit
by Oliver Jeffers
7. Killing Jesus
by Martin Dugard
8. LEGO Play Book: Ideas to Bring Your Bricks To Life
by Daniel Lipkowitz
9. The Book Thief
by Markus Zusak
10. The Goldfinch
by Donna Tartt
11. Doctor Sleep: A Novel
by Stephen King
12. David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits and the Art of Battling Giants
by Malcolm Gladwell
13. Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims: Time-Travel Adventures with Exceptional Americans
by Rush Limbaugh
14. The One and Only Ivan
by Katherine A. Applegate
15. Sycamore Row
by John Grisham
16. The Fault in Our Stars
by John Green
17. Divergent (Divergent Series)
by Veronica Roth
18. The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism
by Doris Kearns Goodwin
19. The Hunger Games Trilogy Boxset
by Suzanne Collins
20. The House of Hades (Heroes of Olympus, Book 4)
by Rick Riordan

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