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- <text id=90TT3521>
- <title>
- Dec. 31, 1990: Books:Best Of '90
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 31, 1990 The Best Of '90
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 55
- BEST OF '90
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>FICTION
- </p>
- <p> The Burden of Proof, by Scott Turow. The blockbuster novel
- of the year is also one of the better, more intelligent reads.
- As he did in Presumed Innocent (1987), the author-lawyer hurls
- the human impulse to make trouble straight at the bloodless
- statutes designed to keep the peace. The impact is shattering,
- and the echoes remain long after the explosion is over.
- </p>
- <p> Friend of My Youth, by Alice Munro. This collection of 10
- shimmering stories should put to rest, at least for a while, the
- old canard that nothing interesting ever happens in Canada. The
- author, who lives near Lake Huron, writes about the lives, times
- and loves of her country-men and -women with grace, precision and
- memorable generosity.
- </p>
- <p> The General in His Labyrinth, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. The
- last months and days of Simon Bolivar, the brilliant and
- thwarted liberator of South America, are imaginatively
- reconstructed by the acknowledged master of magic realism. As
- the general flees from his progressive illness and ungrateful
- people, he trails, in his turbulent wake, a hyperactive tale of
- grandeur and disillusionment.
- </p>
- <p> My Son's Story, by Nadine Gordimer. For nearly 25 years,
- those who have wanted to burrow beneath the headlines from South
- Africa have consulted the fiction of Nadine Gordimer. Her 10th
- novel, which deals with a "colored" schoolteacher caught up in
- his country's racial strife, offers another inside view of
- people who are trapped and defined by the fatal abstractions of
- black and white.
- </p>
- <p> Philadelphia Fire, by John Edgar Wideman. This fiction
- revolves around a fact: the May 1985 fire bombing (ordered by
- a black mayor) of a Philadelphia house occupied by a black
- organization called Move. But that is only the starting point
- for a prolonged, dramatic monologue on racism in the U.S. and
- the possibility that the birth of the nation was accompanied by
- a genetic disorder.
- </p>
- <p> Possession: A Romance, by A.S. Byatt. Two contemporary
- British scholars, one male, one female, try to collect evidence
- about a presumed love affair between two Victorian poets, one
- male, one female. Antonia Byatt, who until recently has been
- known chiefly as Margaret Drabble's older sister, comes into her
- own as a novelist (and romancer) of dazzling inventiveness.
- </p>
- <p> The Quincunx, by Charles Palliser. Roughly half a million
- words long, this extravagant narrative is a faithful re-creation
- of the 19th century British novel--lots of them, including
- Bleak House, Great Expectations and Jane Eyre. Miraculously,
- this bald-faced imitation works wonders. The author makes the
- distant world of Victorian fiction, with its careful plotting
- and moral punctiliousness, as gripping as tomorrow's whodunit.
- </p>
- <p> Rabbit at Rest, by John Updike. Rumors of his death have been
- greatly exaggerated; Harold C. ("Rabbit") Angstrom is in awful
- shape at the end of this novel, the victim of piggy habits and
- a massive coronary, but Updike has left himself free to have a
- second opinion. If Rabbit really is finished, in this fourth
- book, then so too is a luminous, encyclopedic saga of postwar
- America.
- </p>
- <p> Symposium, by Muriel Spark. Ten guests assemble for a
- fashionable London dinner party, with no idea of just how
- murderously interesting the affair will turn out to be. The
- author here approaches the sinister elegance of her The Prime
- of Miss Jean Brodie (1961). She introduces fundamental issues--salvation and sin, inspiration and insanity, free will and
- destiny--through the medium of light but lethal comedy.
- </p>
- <p> Vineland, by Thomas Pynchon. Devotees waited 17 years for the
- author to outdo his apocalyptic Gravity's Rainbow (1973). What
- they got instead was a kinder, gentler Pynchon. This saga of
- wilting '60s flower children, circa 1984, on the lam from
- federal narcs, displays much of the author's old virtuosity:
- stunning erudition and terminal paranoia coupled with the
- hard-edged loopiness of cartoons. That is not surprising; the
- happy ending is.
- </p>
- <p>NONFICTION
- </p>
- <p> C.S. Lewis: A Biography, by A.N. Wilson. Comic novels, essays
- and biographies waft from Wilson with Mozartean ease. Each book
- seems better than the last, or at least different in some
- incomparable way. Such is the case with his approach to Lewis,
- the British writer and celebrator of Christian thought who
- delighted both adults (The Screwtape Letters) and children (The
- Chronicles of Narnia). Fans should be warned that Wilson's
- portrait of the saintly don contains some fleshy demons.
- </p>
- <p> A Hole in the World, by Richard Rhodes. Child abuse was not
- discovered by if-it-bleeds-it-leads TV-news editors. Suffering
- innocents can also be found in literature, extending from Medea
- to Oliver Twist. Set in the Midwest during the '30s and '40s,
- this memoir of how Rhodes and his brother survived mistreatment
- by a hateful stepmother should become a minor classic.
- </p>
- <p> In All His Glory: The Life of William S. Paley, by Sally
- Bedell Smith. Paley, the founder of CBS and a Manhattan
- socialite, died not a moment too soon to avoid seeing himself
- debunked in this best-selling biography. "Paley," says the
- author, "was as spoiled as a man could be." By the end of her
- razor-edged narrative, Smith has cut her subject down to where
- he would have trouble filling a 12-in. screen.
- </p>
- <p> Legacies: A Chinese Mosaic, by Bette Bao Lord. When Lord went
- to fetch her father's ashes from a Red Chinese prison, she was
- told that his ears had been torn off. It was all she had to hear
- to know that the official report of suicide was a lie. The
- author, wife of the former ambassador to China Winston Lord,
- confronts 40 years of cultural distortion in the People's
- Republic.
- </p>
- <p> Means of Ascent, by Robert A. Caro. The second installment
- of what promises to be the longest and liveliest American
- political biography of modern times finds Lyndon Johnson
- transforming what were certainly not his finest hours into
- tarnished triumphs. To wit: avoiding World War II combat for as
- long as possible and then parlaying a few minutes under fire
- into a Silver Star; and stealing the 1948 Texas senatorial
- election with 87 questionable votes--enough to earn him the
- nickname Landslide Lyndon.
- </p>
- <p> The Politics of Rich and Poor, by Kevin Phillips. Twenty
- years ago, the Nostradamus of Washington correctly predicted the
- emerging Republican majority. Now Phillips foresees a populist
- backlash to the greedfest of the Reagan '80s. A provocative
- analysis based on social science and a cyclical view of history.
- </p>
- <p> The Polk Conspiracy, by Kati Marton. One of the mysteries of
- the early years of the cold war has been, Who killed George
- Polk? He was a CBS correspondent in 1948 who, shortly after
- threatening to expose corrupt officials of the Greek Royalist
- government, was found floating in Salonika bay with a bullet in
- his head. The Royalists blamed the communists. Not so, according
- to Marton. Her investigations reveal a right-wing conspiracy and
- a Washington cover-up aided by columnist Walter Lippmann.
- </p>
- <p> The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, by Daniel
- Yergin. If you ever had any doubt about what makes today's
- political pole greasy, read this documentary history of the
- petroleum industry. Yergin leaves no promising source undrilled
- in this story of how the U.S. has gone from being the world's
- leading exporter of oil products to a nation of worried
- petroholics.
- </p>
- <p> Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years, by Brian Boyd. The late,
- great novelist once defined biography as "psycho-plagiarism,"
- the unauthorized use of another's mental states. It is nearly
- impossible to think how an outsider could enter Nabokov's
- baroque imagination, let alone leave with its mysteries intact.
- Boyd's brilliant biography is a sort of literary cyclotron,
- accelerating streams of His Nabs' life and work until they
- collide in ways that leave traces of his genius.
- </p>
- <p> What I Saw at the Revolution, by Peggy Noonan. Presidents are
- accustomed to having words put in their mouths. Ronald Reagan
- was spoon-fed by speechwriter Noonan, who also flavored George
- Bush's minced syntax with "a thousand points of light." As a
- woman with a lower-middle-class background and a degree from a
- third-rate college, she was largely ignored by bosses she calls
- "Harvardheads." Their mistake. Noonan's witty memoir of her time
- at conservatism's red-hot center proves that the way to spell
- revenge is b-e-s-t s-e-l-l-e-r.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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