Katherine Hill
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Some Single Transcendent Talent

3/27/2012

4 Comments

 
Thanks to Iron Husband Matt Karp, the movies of 2011 occupied most of my blogging brain in recent months (see the fruits of those labors over at the Iron List). But I've been reading, too. Not as much as I would like, but enough to blab about it for a little while here. 
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First up, The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach, which, a few debatable plot points aside, really is that good. I mean, I read that thing jealously in every sense of the word -- wishing people would leave me alone and just let me read, wishing I'd written it myself. Damn him. I guess I understand why it might be a hard sell for some readers: there's really only one female character, and there's a LOT of stuff about baseball. But Harbach succeeds where so many otherwise talented sports novelists fall short (I'm looking at you, Richard Ford); he really captures the experience of the athlete. Not just the punishing work-outs, the throbbing knees, and the pain of losing (though that's all beautifully, viscerally there), but also the rare single-mindedness of athletic pursuit -- the rather extraordinary (and also rather limited) way that the best athletes can deafen themselves to background noise, suppress interest in other human activities, and make an entire life of one motion, performed again and again and again. While transcendence is what everyone's after, Henry Skrimshander is remarkable for his narrowness, Mike Schwartz for his tolerance for pain. So, OK, yes, I'm sucker for jocks, but baseball is not my sport. In fact, my apathy borders on hatred: those long games, that long season, those stupid uniforms with those embarrassing belts. Why watch a misshapen guy stand around in the outfield when you can watch Dwyane Wade unleash himself for a steal and a rearing, hurtling fast break? But Harbach made me kind of like baseball, and that may well be a literary triumph in itself. 

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Leaving the Atocha Station was another literary darling of 2011, and another take on ambition. It's a slim novel by the young poet Ben Lerner about a self-loathing, over-medicated young poet on a prestigious fellowship in Spain. I assume it's autobiographical, because, among other coincidences, both the author and the narrator, whose name I can't remember, are from Topeka, and son to a famous feminist psychologist. (Having worked on Harriet Lerner's backlist in a past life, this particular coincidence pleased me to no end.) The book looks and feels like a monograph you're forced to read for a sociology course, but otherwise, Coffee House Press did very well by it. This is a delightful, chastening novel about personal and political anxiety and the perils of trying to speak Spanish when you can't. Highly recommended. 

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And then, of course, there's Stewart O'Nan, who gets ordinary American life better than almost anyone. It's incredible how much he notices. He takes care to refer to the "ass-end" of the dishwasher, which I can only assume is exactly what a Red Lobster line chef would call it (Last Night at the Lobster). He can build an entire chapter around the mysterious appearance of spray-painted numbers on a sidewalk, and the breathless manner in which an older woman harps on it to her grown children, though she knows that neither one cares (Emily, Alone). He can capture the exact cranky feeling of standing in line in the cold on vacation (The Odds). I read all three of these treasures in the past few months, and I can't stop being impressed with O'Nan. He's a writer who makes characters and story out of details so mundane, most other writers would just as soon skip them -- which turns out to be those other writers' loss. 

4 Comments
Freddi
3/27/2012 05:38:29 am

I'm very excited to read some or all of these books Katherine! Thanks for the spring wrap-up.

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David G
3/28/2012 12:06:26 am

Eyeroll on the Richard Ford diss: The Sportswriter is about sports just like The Moviegoer is about movies. You have whetted my whistle for Fielding, though, which I'll start tonight!

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Katherine link
3/28/2012 12:39:03 am

I know The Sportswriter was not about sports. I just really, really wanted it to be.

Fielding is probably the perfect opener for baseball season. You will like and admire much of this book, Dearest David G. And I can't wait to hear which parts of it you hate!

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Kirk Michael
3/29/2012 04:58:45 am

you watch baseball because the misshapen outfielder is less likely to fall down for no reason than Dwyane Wade. when you say he hurtles, you mean hurtles to the ground from an imagined foul, right? after a season of basketball, I'm ready for baseball: no referees.

re: the literature. you overpraise Atocha if you consider it any more than a pleasing trifle.
http://www.thewhitetanktop.com/2012/03/what-poem-was-that-anyway.html

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