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- <text id=91TT1458>
- <title>
- July 01, 1991: Summer Reading
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 01, 1991 Cocaine Inc.
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 70
- Summer Reading
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A dozen books to beguile a long, leisurely season in the sun
- </p>
- <p>By STEFAN KANFER
- </p>
- <p> Peter Benchley's 1974 best seller, Jaws, starred the
- shark that ate Long Island, became a smashing film and inspired
- a school of sequels. After some dry runs, the novelist has
- taken the plunge again. Beast (Random House; 350 pages; $21)
- features tentacles rather than mandibles. Otherwise it is the
- familiar mixture: lethal creature, relentless pursuers and vast
- quantities of saline solution. When waters off Bermuda become
- the killing grounds of a giant squid, tourism collapses.
- Whereupon an Ahabian fisherman, Whip Darling, clambers into a
- submarine and leads the hunt. All the old ingredients are
- present, from aqua horror ("the creature moved toward the
- unnatural thing") to Moby Dick denouement (" `Here!' he shouted,
- and he drove the saw deep into the yawning beak"). In between
- are adrenal confrontations and detailed descriptions of marine
- life and death -- everything, in fact, but background music and
- special effects. Wait till next year.
- </p>
- <p> The insinuations of Kitty Kelley satisfied some readers
- and repelled others. A third group could not get enough
- backstairs gossip, and its members are the target audience for
- A House of Secrets (Birch Lane; 237 pages; $18.95). The novel
- has two things to recommend it: a plausible first-person tone
- of wounded innocence, and an author named Patti Davis -- better
- known as the daughter of Nancy D. Reagan. The narrator is one
- Carla Lawton, who grows up in California with few friends and
- one opponent: her mother. Rachel Lawton lies compulsively and
- attempts to control every aspect of her child's life. She makes
- toilet training a battleground, then becomes an increasingly
- jealous and violent competitor as Carla matures sexually.
- Democrats eager for political revelations will be disappointed.
- Throughout the misadventures, Daddy, a bicoastal businessman,
- is malleable and remote as he floats through years of Teflon
- fatherhood.
- </p>
- <p> Elmore Leonard controls more assets than a Mafia don. He
- possesses a gift for lowlife dialogue, a thorough knowledge of
- underworld mores and a mastery of high-tension narrative. What
- he does not have is a gift for whimsy, and that, alas, is the
- chief ingredient of Maximum Bob (Delacorte; 295 pages; $20). The
- title character is a sleazoid Florida judge who likes to hit on
- lady cops and hand out heavy sentences. Someone tries to ice
- Maximum Bob with a unique weapon: a hungry alligator. There is
- a long enemies list, including Leanne, the judge's loony wife;
- Dale Crowe, the latest victim of his warped justice; Dale's
- murderous uncle Elvin; and Dr. Tommy Vasco, a former
- dermatologist with a skinful of booze and drugs. Maximum Bob's
- survival depends on Kathy Baker, an attractive young probation
- officer. She and the rest of the cast provide a few entertaining
- moments for diehard fans. All others should wait until Leonard
- takes early retirement from the police farce.
- </p>
- <p> The President, the Joint Chiefs, the CIA, an Australian
- doctor, an idealistic revolutionary, a dazzling lady leftist
- whose eyes show "a vulnerability that she took such pains to
- conceal . . ." Len Deighton is at it again, this time in the
- treacherous jungles of South America. Throughout MAMista
- (HarperCollins; 410 pages; $21.95), guerrillas attempt to seize
- control of Spanish Guiana, currently under the thumb of
- cryptofascist goons. The covert war is rife with betrayal, and
- ultimately no one is pure in Deighton's 17th spy novel.
- Intrigues misfire; disease kills more effectively than bullets;
- and corruption becomes the order of the day. Even so, the
- characters are shrewdly delineated, and the suspense continues
- until the final paragraph. Moral ambiguity used to be called
- Greeneland. Since Graham Greene's death, that territory is open
- for conquest. At least a part of it ought to be renamed
- Deightonsville.
- </p>
- <p> When the body of Carla Tate washes up a few miles south of
- Santa Barbara, the flashbacks unreel in A Hollywood Life (Simon
- & Schuster; 320 pages; $19.95). The movie star, nee Karen
- Teitel, makes her screen debut in infancy, moves on to kiddie
- westerns and eventually becomes a major cinema celebrity. En
- route she passes through every Hollywood vicissitude and
- fashion, from child abuse to blacklisting to Vietnam protests
- to exercise tapes. She also manages to collect a series of
- husbands and lovers, most notably movie executive Jack Markel,
- who has all the Hollywood requisites: he is 30 years older,
- married, with strong ties to the Mob. David Freeman's pop
- tragedy contains snippets of biographical detail from the lives
- of Elizabeth Taylor, Shirley Temple, Jane Fonda and Natalie
- Wood. You've read the movies. Now see the book.
- </p>
- <p> Back east, show business is more perilous for producers
- than for performers. Ben Riller is an impresario with a string
- of hits behind him and catastrophe in sight: he wants to
- produce a play in verse. (There actually was a rhyming comedy
- on Broadway this season, La Bete, and it bombed.) Short on cash,
- Ben borrows from Nick Manucci, a colorful old mafioso who wants
- 10% interest weekly, plus 50% of the show. As events hurtle
- toward opening night, agitations grow and Ben becomes more and
- more indecisive until, like Hamlet, he begins having
- conversations with his late father. Fortunately, they are witty
- exchanges by two convincing characters. Then again, in The Best
- Revenge (Random House; 240 pages; $20) everyone is convincing.
- Along with Tennessee Williams, novelist Sol Stein was a member
- of the Playwrights Unit at the Actors Studio. His portrait of
- backstage back stabbing is as uncomfortable as it is amusing,
- but Stein obviously knows what he is writhing about.
- </p>
- <p> Playing the devil's advocate is Father Andrew M. Greeley's
- favorite avocation. His novels continually irritate the church
- he serves, by revealing Vatican politics and presenting flawed
- priests. The narrator of An Occasion of Sin (Putnam; 352 pages;
- $19.95) puts forth the most imperfect of them all. The
- scurrilous, irritable Father Lar McAuliffe is assigned to test
- the claims of sainthood for his late detested colleague, John
- Cardinal McGlynn, martyred in Nicaragua. Father Lar rubs his
- hands in anticipation -- he knows all about the Cardinal's
- mistress, his alcoholism and his rumored misuse of church funds.
- But as the priest pokes through the debris of a dead man's life,
- he finds that His Eminence performed many hidden acts of bravery
- and altruism. Is he worthy of canonization? Or does the past
- throw too long a shadow? Can it be that Greeley is knowledgeable
- and skilled enough to make the reader care? Saints preserve us.
- </p>
- <p> When his wealthy Italian mistress dies, the amoral
- historian Max Mather inherits first choice from among her trove
- of paintings. Rummaging around, he finds two panels of aged
- wood. On them are portraits that have never been cataloged, both
- by Raphael, and each is worth in excess of $50 million. The
- Italian government may seize such rare items as national
- treasures, so Max works a scheme to spirit them out of the
- country. But this is only the beginning of Masterclass (St.
- Martin's Press; 330 pages; $19.95). Author Morris West (The
- Shoes of the Fisherman, The Clowns of God) fills his palette
- with informed descriptions of the cutthroat gallery world and
- furnishes his novel with subplots concerning financial
- shenanigans in Zurich, the ski slopes of St.-Moritz and a murder
- in Manhattan. West, a longtime connoisseur, knows about the art
- of the deal and the dealing of the art.
- </p>
- <p> A novel that stops on page 36 for a brief treatise on tea
- is obviously not in a hurry. Neither are the protagonists of
- Bronze Mirror (Henry Holt; 337 pages; $19.95). The Yellow
- Emperor, who "discovered the wheel and the compass and such,"
- the Silkweb Empress, responsible for "the delicate art of
- silkworm rearing," and their courtiers all flourish during the
- Song dynasty, circa 1135. Another invention is announced: the
- Emperor's minister has developed a set of symbols called
- writing. Now every royal tale can be recorded. The aristocrats
- begin a leisurely contest for the title of best storyteller, and
- during the competition every conceivable subject arises, from
- sexual conquest to miracles, from poetry to war. Jeanne Larsen,
- who previously conjured up the floating vistas of medieval China
- in Silk Road (1989), returns to her theme without repeating
- herself; this is the summer's most audacious entertainment.
- </p>
- <p> Imperials are not the only ones to offer beguiling short
- stories this season. The long-neglected art of yarn spinning is
- robust again, in three fine collections. Joan Chase's Bonneville
- Blue (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 226 pages; $16.95) contains 11
- poignant tales. In one of the finest, Elderberries and Souls,
- the adolescent narrator recalls a passionate crush on her
- stepuncle: "I was smelling his cotton shirt, smoke and starch,
- and his soul, as if that, too, were a thing to be smelled." But
- a sudden glimpse of his unstable temper makes her realize how
- inexperienced she is in the ways of the world and propels her
- into the arms of a simpler, safer and younger admirer. The sense
- of yearning fills and illuminates almost all the other stories,
- of small-town Madame Bovaries with insensitive husbands, of
- divorces who can be simultaneously tough-minded and bewildered:
- "I left my husband. Nearly six months ago, but I still can't
- believe it. I keep thinking I'll wake up."
- </p>
- <p> Roxana Robinson is a fly on the wall in the world of the
- Wasp. The people in her stories are inheritors of urbanity and
- indulgences. They belong to garden and bridge clubs; they have
- exceptional houses, servants, luxuries -- and woes. A Glimpse
- of Scarlet (HarperCollins; 200 pages; $18.95) watches a divorced
- mother betrayed by her son's prep school roommate; a man's
- failing eyesight turn into a "treason of the body"; wavering
- between wife and mistress, a publishing executive experiences
- moral vertigo in his ordered world; a wife holds her husband up
- to public ridicule, only to have things turn around as soon as
- they are alone in the bedroom. Once people like these were the
- focus of Henry James and Edith Wharton; in recent years Louis
- Auchincloss and John Cheever have been their chroniclers.
- Robinson shows a similar mastery of subject and form, and she
- belongs in that august company.
- </p>
- <p> "Your brain can get out of hand," says one character in
- Typical (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 207 pages; $19). Another
- figures that "character is nothing but warts." Judging from
- these 23 fictions, both statements are correct. Padgett Powell's
- two previous books, both novels (Edisto, A Woman Named Drown),
- exhibited a unique gift for regional American comedy. This
- sparkling collection reduces his scope without limiting his
- style. Dr. Ordinary is anything but: "He found God with no
- difficulty, but locating his belief another matter." Miss
- Resignation "liked football and was absolutely certain that she
- could have been an excellent off-tackle, slant-type runner . .
- . 44 was her number. Forty-four was her bra size, too. This had
- held her back in life, she felt." Occasionally the other
- characters in these fragments become a little too wacko, as if
- they were acting out for the onlookers. But Powell has a unique
- and vigorous imagination, and his eccentricity, studied or
- spontaneous, is to be treasured and closely watched.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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