CHECK IT OUT
If one can judge a year by its fiction, the one about to end was a
star epoch. From Zadie Smith’s dazzling debut novel to edgy mysteries by
Robert Crais and T. Jefferson Parker, there’s enough great storytelling
in works listed in the “Best Books of 2000” to keep readers eagerly
turning pages throughout 2001.
With a zany tale that takes on race, history and gender politics,
25-year-old Smith serves up an irresistible cast in “White Teeth.” Moving
from London to Turkey and Bangladesh, the epic-scale work interweaves
family histories involving multicultural friendships, unlikely marriages
and separated twin siblings. There’s more cultural commentary than plot
here, but it’s delivered with such droll wit that even the most reluctant
of readers will probably be swept along.
Multiculturalism also pervades “The Human Stain,” Philip Roth’s
inventive offering set against the Clinton impeachment scandal, about a
black man who passes for a white Jewish classicist. After a gaffe in a
lecture forces him to resign, the aging professor gets caught in a
downward spiral, explored in the narrative by Nathan Zuckerman, Roth’s
alter mind.
Also spiraling downhill is Michael Reed, Denis Johnson’s
grief-stricken narrator in “The Name of the World,”a slim novel that
merges themes of loss and sorrow with a satire of academia. Four years
after his wife and daughter were killed in a car crash, Reed can’t quite
get it together, until he happens upon a free-spirited student who leads
him into unexpected territory.
Two tough female investigators, both mourning the untimely deaths of
their partners, are engaging protagonists in Robert Crais’ “Demolition
Angel” and T. Jefferson Parker’s “Red Light.” Follow bomb squad expert
Carol Starkey on the trail of a maniac intent on blowing up the world in
Crais’ masterful mystery. Join homicide investigator Merci Rayborn in an
office politics-spiked search for a prostitute killer in Parker’s
suspense-filled whodunit.
Faith’s mysteries are probed in Mark Salzman’s “Lying Awake,” a tale
about a Carmelite nun whose brilliant visions and debilitating seizures
are brought on by an operable lesion on her brain.
Other puzzles that involve love are addressed in “Being Dead,” Jim
Crace’s elegant novel that retraces the lives of two zoologists found
murdered on the beach where they had come to rekindle a flame set 30
years earlier.
That everything old can be new again becomes clear in Seamus Heaney’s
new verse translation of “Beowulf.” In a rendering of the English epic
that is also a captivating poem in its own right, the Irish Nobel
laureate delivers a powerful account of battles with monsters and
dragons. It’s all infused with personal understanding of the anguish that
political, religious and social struggles can bring, in the voice of men
who fought actual battles for Ireland.
Check with reference librarians at Newport Beach libraries for titles
of other “Best Books of 2000,” included on lists published by the Los
Angeles Times, The New York Times, Esquire and Barnes & Noble.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Susie Lamb. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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