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- BOOKS, Page 74BEST OF 1991
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- FICTION
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- 1. THE GOLD BUG VARIATIONS by Richard Powers.
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- Back in the late 1950s, Stuart Ressler was one of the
- eager young scientists trying to crack the genetic code of the
- DNA molecule. In the mid-'80s, he works the night shift for a
- computer billing outfit in Brooklyn. What brought Ressler to
- this dead-end job? That is only one of the questions posed and
- answered by this demanding, dazzling novel. Also on display are
- two love stories, two intertwined narratives, vast erudition and
- a white-knuckled, suspense-filled investigation into the meaning
- of life.
-
- 2. MATING by Norman Rush.
-
- A down-on-her-luck American anthropologist in Botswana
- decides it is high time to find a spouse. Into her frame of
- reference comes Nelson Denoon, who is handsome, charismatic and
- doing worthy work for indigenous women in the Kalahari Desert.
- Her narrative of what happens next -- and next -- is both
- uproariously funny and deeply serious, a long courtship of highs
- and lows played against an exotic, meticulously described
- African landscape.
-
- 3. IMMORTALITY by Milan Kundera.
-
- Out of a story about contemporary neuroses -- as displayed
- by four Parisians, two males and two females unhappy in
- interesting ways -- Kundera creates a free-form fictional
- context in which everything, including an imaginary conversation
- between Goethe and Ernest Hemingway, can be claimed to matter.
- The Czech author indulges his obsessive itch to tell all without
- ever turning out a dull or obfuscatory page.
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- 4. A DANGEROUS WOMAN by Mary McGarry Morris.
-
- The thirtysomething Martha Horgan makes an odd heroine,
- lacking, as she does, all the protective and intuitive senses
- society demands. Her job at the local dry cleaner is so
- comforting, compared to the rest of her daily experiences, that
- Martha often shows up on her day off. Morris triumphantly evokes
- the sad, vivid life of a character excluded, for reasons she
- cannot grasp, from the magic circle of friendship and family.
-
- 5. MAO II by Don DeLillo.
-
- Will the overpopulated future offer any room or even
- sanction for the individual consciousness? Bill Gray, 63, a
- famously reclusive author, ponders this question as the outside
- world beckons him to go public. What awaits him there, as his
- dark imaginings foretell, are terrorists, those who have
- usurped the novelists' authority and now "make raids on human
- consciousness." This meeting is unforgettable, thanks to
- DeLillo's terse, electric dialogue and descriptive passages of
- insidious beauty.
-
- LESSER MOMENTS IN PUBLISHING I
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- Most disarming self-critique by the author of a runaway
- best seller: "Margaret Mitchell is a better writer. But she's
- dead."
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- Alexandra Ripley, author of Scarlett
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- Most depressing final words in a novel of more than 1,300
- pages: "To be continued."
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- Norman Mailer, Harlot's Ghost
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- Most welcome final words in a gory thriller of nearly 800
- pages: "Killed enough?" Ryan slid the sword back into its sheath
- and let it fall to his side. "Yes, Your Highness. I think we
- all have."
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- Tom Clancy, The Sum of All Fears
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