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- <text id=89TT3149>
- <title>
- Nov. 27, 1989: Bookends
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 27, 1989 Art And Money
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 84
- Bookends
- </hdr><body>
- <qt> <l>TRUST</l>
- <l>by George V. Higgins</l>
- <l>Henry Holt; 230 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Earl Beale, a salesman at a Boston used-car lot, is a
- former college basketball player who did time in Leavenworth for
- his role in a point-shaving scandal. The fact that he is an
- ex-con has somehow been erased from official records. For this
- dispensation, Earl knows that he owes someone a favor, and when
- the call comes, it looks simple. All he has to do is steal a car
- in Rhode Island.
- </p>
- <p> A slight problem with Trust, George V. Higgins' 20th book,
- is that Earl's task is simple. He pulls off the theft easily;
- for fairly complicated reasons, the intended victim wants the
- car to disappear. Unfortunately, Earl ignores the instructions
- to have the hot auto crushed in a trash compactor. He sells it
- instead, a characteristic act of greed that promises to get him
- in trouble. But Higgins seems much more interested in atmosphere
- than in denouement. There are long, long passages of the
- author's by now patented low-life banter, characters being
- long-winded and tedious about the banalities of their lives.
- Readers who like this sort of thing will love Trust. Others will
- wish that Earl had got his comeuppance a lot earlier in the
- book.
- </p>
- <qt> <l>THE SOUND OF WINGS</l>
- <l>by Mary S. Lovell</l>
- <l>St. Martin's Press; 420 pages; $22.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> On July 2, 1937, an aviator took off from Papua New Guinea
- for Howland Island in the central Pacific. She was on a
- round-the-world trip when she and her twin-engine Lockheed
- Electra lost radio contact and vanished into legend. Since that
- time women have become commercial pilots, paratroopers and even
- astronauts. Yet the name of Amelia Earhart retains the power to
- intrigue. Did she assume a new identity? Was she on a secret
- reconnaissance mission? Did she get captured by the Japanese?
- Mary S. Lovell shrugs off these theories; her emphasis is on
- Earhart's life and accomplishments.
- </p>
- <p> Early on, the shy, Kansas-born social worker made two key
- decisions: she fell in love with flying, and she married a
- publisher, G.P. Putnam. He manipulated the press to create an
- international celebrity. Earhart became the first woman to fly
- across the Atlantic and the first person to fly solo from
- Honolulu to Oakland. But if she was an eagle aloft, she remained
- a sparrow on the ground. Lovell, biographer of the British pilot
- Beryl Markham, can do little to romanticize her taciturn
- subject. It is only when Earhart climbs into the cockpit that
- The Sound of Wings truly takes off.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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