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- BOOKS, Page 64THE BEST OF 1992
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- FICTION
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- 1. The English Patient
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- By Michael Ondaatje. Rare is the fiction that dictates its
- own challenging terms on the first page and by the last has
- readers convinced that their perceptions of life, love and
- history were sophisticated all along. Ondaatje's characters --
- a dying burn victim, a young nurse, a morphine thief and a Sikh
- defuser of unexploded Luftwaffe bombs -- are spun of dreams and
- verbal magic. The quartet intersect at a critical moment: the
- last year of World War II, the beginning of the end of the
- British Empire and the start of the postimperial age.
-
- 2. Clockers
-
- By Richard Price. Like a rock in a sock, this novel of
- drug deals and double-deals in a gritty New Jersey industrial
- town squeezed between Newark and Jersey City packs a shattering
- wallop. Price spent time on the streets listening to the stories
- of pushers and police and getting the details and dialogue
- right. There's a killing, a twisty plot and enough realism to
- satisfy the audience for conventional thrillers. But Price, also
- a film scriptwriter, puts his lowlifes on a higher literary
- plane.
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- 3. All the Pretty Horses
-
- By Cormac McCarthy. The first of a planned trilogy about
- life in the borderlands of Texas and Mexico in 1949 clip-clops
- along for a while before breaking into a graceful canter that
- carries the reader nostalgically into the sunset. The story
- evokes the coming of age of a young horseman who, with a
- sidekick, rides into Mexico in search of seasoning and
- adventure. He finds it taming horses on a rich man's ranch,
- wrapped in the arms of a spirited young woman and caught in the
- snares of a corrupt policeman. In prose that echoes early
- Hemingway, McCarthy recalls a Southwest in the twilight of its
- legendary wildness.
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- 4. Outerbridge Reach
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- By Robert Stone. Like characters in his previous novels,
- those in this tale about the dangers of the sea and the
- treacheries of media exposure live at the extremes. Stone's
- handsome couple risk comfort, security and their good marriage
- when the head of the house decides to sail in an
- around-the-world race. Worse yet, he allows an untrustworthy
- documentary filmmaker to remain ashore and publicize the
- expensive exploit. There are storms at sea and emotional
- whirlpools at home. Before the end, skipper, wife and boat
- reveal their flaws, and Stone once again demonstrates his skills
- as a poet of doom.
-
- 5. Dreaming in Cuban
-
- By Cristina Garcia. This first novel by a Cuban American
- tells the poignant, often funny story of three generations of
- Cuban women and their varying responses to Fidel's revolution.
- Pro- and anti-Castro factions clash. The children are
- scattered, one to the East bloc, another to Brooklyn to
- establish the Yankee Doodle Bakery and harbor the memory of her
- rape by revolutionaries. Garcia's imagination ranges over the
- country's past, its heritage and, through the longings of a
- young American girl to reunite with her revolutionary
- grandmother in Havana, its future.
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- . . . AND THE WORST
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- The Immortals
-
- By Michael Korda. Secure in the knowledge that the dead
- cannot be libeled, the publishing executive and writer of best
- sellers concocts a plot that takes the stories of the Jack
- Kennedy-Marilyn Monroe sexual summits to new lows of speculation
- and ghoulish dialogue.
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- NON-FICTION
-
- 1. What It Takes
-
- By Richard Ben Cramer. In an election year supersaturated
- with tasteless sound bites and redundant punditry, who would
- pay $28 for 1,000 pages about the 1988 race for the White
- House? Enough readers to put this on 1992 best-seller lists.
- Cramer does for politics what Tom Wolfe did for the space
- program: get behind the cliches, public relations and media hype
- to reveal the ambitions, strengths and weaknesses of the
- candidates.
-
- 2. Up in the Old Hotel
-
- By Joseph Mitchell. This would be among the best books of
- any year. In fact it (they) was. The volume contains four
- previously published books by Mitchell, 84, the legendary
- reporter for the New Yorker. Out of print for decades,
- McSorley's Wonderful Saloon, Old Mr. Flood, The Bottom of the
- Harbor and Joe Gould's Secret are crammed with Mitchell's
- favorite subjects: visionaries, obsessives, impostors, fanatics,
- lost souls, street preachers and Gypsy kings and queens. Before
- the days of the tape-recorded interview, Mitchell caught their
- cadences and quirks and turned them into matchless American
- prose.
-
- 3. Kissinger: A Biography
-
- By Walter Isaacson. What made Henry Kissinger run, says
- the author, was his "gnawing insecurity" and arrogance, "the
- legacy of a childhood spent feeling both smarter and more
- beleaguered than those around him." Both admiring and critical
- of the former Secretary of State, this account by an assistant
- managing editor of TIME concludes that, despite his brilliance,
- Kissinger did not fully appreciate "the moral values that are
- the true sources of [America's] global influence."
-
- 4. Truman
-
- By David McCullough. Behind his image as the uncommon
- common man, Harry Truman was an old-fashioned back-room
- politician in Kansas City, Missouri, the headquarters of boss
- Tom Pendergast. It was he who sent Truman to the U.S. Senate,
- where he quickly impressed his peers. McCullough's hefty tome
- reminds readers that the old machine worked pretty well if it
- could start a man who was an unsuccessful farmer and failed
- haberdasher on the road to the White House, where he is
- remembered as the decisive President who directed the end of
- World War II and the beginning of the cold war.
-
- 5. Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman
-
- By James Gleick. The public got a glimpse of Richard
- Feynman's ability to go to the heart of a problem when he
- appeared on television to dip a bit of rubber into a glass of
- ice water, thus demonstrating how a drop in temperature damaged
- the O rings that caused the Challenger to explode shortly after
- lift-off. Behind this show-and-tell was a Nobel prizewinner who
- astonished his peers with penetrating intuition and shocked many
- with his skirt chasing and bongo playing. Gleick explains the
- paradoxes of Feynman's science and the irrepressible life-force
- of a man who talked like a Brooklyn cab driver and thought like
- a god.
-
-
- . . . AND THE WORST
-
- Making Love
-
- by Richard Rhodes. The distinguished author of The Making
- of the Atomic Bomb vainly attempts to make the earth move with
- an embarrassingly solemn account of his sweaty sexual history. A
- description of his orgasm should start a chain reaction of
- giggles.
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