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- <text id=89TT1108>
- <title>
- Apr. 24, 1989: Bookends
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 24, 1989 The Rat Race
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 88
- Bookends
- </hdr><body>
- <qt> <l>DIFFICULTIES WITH GIRLS</l>
- <l>by Kingsley Amis</l>
- <l>Summit; 276 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Patrick and Jenny Standish have just moved into a modern
- apartment complex south of the Thames in London (faithful Amis
- readers will recall the courtship of these two as recorded 29
- years ago in Take a Girl Like You). Patrick has stopped being a
- Latin teacher and now works as an editor at a publishing house.
- After nearly eight years of marriage, he is proving no match for
- the temptations of swinging London in the '60s. His difficulties
- with girls involve an inability to resist them. A new neighbor,
- Tim Valentine, confesses to another sort of problem: an initial
- enthusiasm followed immediately by unmanning apathy. He has
- decided that he must be homosexual. Patrick's tasks include
- talking Tim out of this idea and keeping his own marriage from
- foundering. The author trots out these carnal misadventures with
- his usual comic flair. Patrick is a typical Amis hero, a young
- fogy who finds much of the world exasperating. Beneath the
- crackling surface, though, lies a more somber tale of people
- behaving badly and, in most cases, finally coming to their
- senses.
- </p>
- <qt> <l>WORKING DAYS: THE JOURNALS OF THE GRAPES OF WRATH</l>
- <l>by John Steinbeck edited by Robert DeMott;</l>
- <l>Viking; 180 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Published 50 years ago, The Grapes of Wrath has taken its
- place among the handful of American novels (Uncle Tom's Cabin,
- The Jungle) that changed public attitudes and policy. To mark
- its golden anniversary, the book's original publisher has
- issued a new edition (Viking; $25) and also the journals
- Steinbeck kept during the five months (five months!) it took him
- to complete the 200,000-word manuscript.
- </p>
- <p> The author, then 36, used these private notes as warm-up
- exercises for the day's work. He gave himself pep talks: "This
- must be a good book. It simply must. I haven't any choice." To
- readers today, the fascination of this document rests in its
- portrait of an artist at the peak of his skills. Steinbeck's
- outrage at the mistreatment of Dust Bowl migrants in
- California, which he had witnessed firsthand, fused with his
- storytelling abilities to produce the most powerful book he
- would ever write. It won him the Pulitzer Prize and contributed
- mightily to his Nobel Prize in 1962. Both exhilarated and
- exhausted after finishing the book, Steinbeck wondered whether
- he would ever write so well again: "That part of my life that
- made the Grapes is over."
- </p>
- <qt> <l>WORDSTRUCK</l>
- <l>by Robert MacNeil</l>
- <l>Viking; 230 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> In this charming memoir, half of PBS's MacNeil/Lehrer news
- team deftly links his early biography to the words and books he
- learned, to connections made. Born in Montreal but raised
- mostly in Halifax, Robert MacNeil was the son of a seagoing
- Mountie (in Canada's equivalent of the Coast Guard) and a Nova
- Scotian mother who delighted in reading aloud to her sons.
- MacNeil's first nonbaby words were "gin fizz" -- the name of a
- teddy bear. He recalls being amazed, on a rare trip aboard his
- father's corvette, that sailing terms derived from Viking days
- (coxswain, starboard) still have a defining role in modern
- navies. MacNeil's memories of Nova Scotia have what D.H.
- Lawrence called a "spirit of place." In the book's best pages,
- one can almost whiff the salty tang of fog descending on proud,
- poky Halifax as winter comes.
- </p>
- <qt> <l>SHARE OF HONOR</l>
- <l>by Ralph Graves</l>
- <l>Henry Holt; 454 pages; $19.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> The winds of war whip briskly through this novel of the
- Philippines just before and during the Japanese occupation.
- Ralph Graves, who knew the islands as the teenage stepson of
- the U.S. High Commissioner during 1939-41, re-creates the
- prewar colonial atmosphere, the swift arrival of the enemy after
- Pearl Harbor and the struggle to survive until General Douglas
- MacArthur's triumphant return. Graves, the last managing editor
- of the weekly LIFE and a retired editorial director of Time
- Inc., deploys a diverse cast of characters (American, Filipino
- and Japanese) whose fates are joined in a narrative that
- combines the observations of good journalism with the emotional
- impact of perceptive fiction.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-