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- <text id=93TT2224>
- <title>
- Sep. 13, 1993: Reviews:Books
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 13, 1993 Leap Of Faith
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 77
- Books
- A Big Hit, A Small Miss
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TITLE: Smilla's Sense Of Snow</l>
- <l>AUTHOR: Peter Hoeg, Translated By Tiina Nunnally</l>
- </qt>
- <qt>
- <l>PUBLISHER: Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 453 Pages; $21</l>
- <l>TITLE: A Simple Plan</l>
- </qt>
- <qt>
- <l>AUTHOR: Scott Smith</l>
- <l>PUBLISHER: Knopf; 335 Pages; $21</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: Two ballyhooed books are classic examples of
- how to--and how not to--write a great thriller.
- </p>
- <p> "It's freezing--an extraordinary 0 degrees Fahrenheit--and
- it's snowing, and in the language that is no longer mine, the
- snow is qanik--big, almost weightless crystals falling in
- clumps and covering the ground with a layer of pulverized white
- frost. December darkness rises up from the grave..."
- </p>
- <p> So begins a remarkable, brooding detective thriller by Peter
- Hoeg, a Danish writer whose work is new to the U.S. The story's
- grim background is Denmark's exploitation of Greenland, the
- bleak northern island given its bosky name by Erik the Red,
- an early real estate promoter who hoped to attract settlers.
- Most recently, Danes have mined and exhausted Greenland's vast
- reserves of cryolite, a mineral used in the refining of aluminum,
- while giving only perfunctory and highly patronizing attention
- to the culture of the native Inuit.
- </p>
- <p> That's the antiestablishment view of Hoeg's heroine, Smilla
- Qaavigaaq Jas persen, a woman caught between the native Greenland
- culture of her mother, a hunter and tracker, and the comfortable
- wealth of her Danish father, a physician and scientist. Smilla
- knows both science and snow, but she is too rebellious to work
- regularly for the ruling Danes. She is at loose ends in Copenhagen
- when a six-year-old Eskimo boy she has befriended slips from
- the snowy roof of their apartment house and is killed. An accident,
- of course; but the boy, Smilla knows, wouldn't normally have
- been running on the roof, as his tracks show. And wouldn't have
- slipped on snow.
- </p>
- <p> Who killed a harmless boy? Come to think of it, where does his
- alcoholic mother get her money? Smilla begins to poke into a
- mystery that no one else acknowledges. Answers disappear in
- the gray, corporate fog that surrounds a great mining conglomerate.
- The police warn her roughly to stop annoying important citizens.
- She is befriended--Why? Simply because she's good-looking?--by a hulking, silent man, a mechanic, who seems to have had
- a violent past.
- </p>
- <p> So the storyteller's ancient, changeless pattern develops, working
- as well in Denmark and Greenland as it did for Ross Macdonald
- in his Lew Archer novels of darkest California and for Martin
- Cruz Smith and the series that began with Gorky Park in Moscow.
- Smilla puts her nose in harm's way and gets it bloodied. Like
- Archer and like Smith's Russian cop Arkady Renko, she keeps
- on poking. She's in peril in a glossy casino near Copenhagen,
- on a powerful, mysteriously equipped icebreaker plowing north
- toward Greenland, on the floating metal atoll of a huge fueling
- dock, and finally on the Greenland snow.
- </p>
- <p> Why does this pull so strongly at the imagination? Partly (though
- this is the least of the elements) because the puzzle is good:
- Is the icebreaker really prepared to bring back something that
- has been living for centuries in the Greenland ice? Partly because,
- seen by Smilla under stress, the background texture--the casino,
- the sinister ship--has the grain-by-grain fascination of a
- prison cell's stone wall. And finally because Smilla is good
- company. She's interesting, full of odd quirks and skewed perspectives:
- someone you'd enjoy talking with over a long dinner.
- </p>
- <p> This last element--the not unreasonable requirement that at
- least somebody in a thriller be interesting enough to spend
- an evening with--is utterly absent from another much whooped
- crime novel about to reach the bookstores. It doesn't matter
- that the story comes from Rent-a-Plot in first novelist Scott
- Smith's A Simple Plan. The idea has worked before and will again:
- a couple of ordinary guys in northern Ohio stumble over a small
- plane crashed in the woods. The pilot is dead. The cargo is
- $3.5 million in used U.S. currency. Should they...?
- </p>
- <p> Sure. But don't tell anyone. Naturally, the word spreads, to
- a drinking buddy, his girlfriend, a wife and so on. There's
- nothing wrong with the narrative idea here, and the reader should
- skid amiably into the underbrush of Chapter 2, as the treasure
- finders turn into thieves and murderers, miring themselves in
- treachery. But Smith has written a story in which all the characters,
- not excluding the first-person narrator, are stupid, mean and
- boring. They are jerks, irredeemable fools, and if one sat down
- next to you at a bar and started talking, you would pay your
- tab and move on. The point is not that every crime story needs
- a hero--Elmore Leonard writes brilliantly and almost exclusively
- about career wrongos--but that at least somebody in a novel
- should be worth the reader's attention. Not even your friendly
- neighborhood parole board would be interested in Smith's bozos.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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