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The Strength of a Broken Heart
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13231 |
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BOOK WORLD
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10 / 1987 |
2,887 Words |
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Linda Bayer Linda Bayer is a professor of humanities at Boston University
and is also pursuing research in psychology at Harvard. Having
written books on literary criticism and art history (under
the name Bayer-Berenbaum), she will see the publication this
spring of her first novel, The Blessing and the Curse, which
deals with broken families and single motherhood. |
CROOKED HEARTS
Robert Boswell
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1987
368 pp., $17.95
If America is a country obsessed with winning - whether the scoring takes place in the Super Bowl, the race in space, the stock market, or the bedroom - the extraordinary new novel Crooked Hearts is about losing. Robert Boswell explores the slow demise of a loving family, aptly named the Warrens, who are at war with one another and with themselves. In this story, set in Arizona and she desert of the human heart, we meet a father who has betrayed his wife, a son who has dropped out of college, and an asthmatic daughter who has trouble breathing and staying awake (not to mention cleaning her room).
The Warren family has a custom of celebrating failures with parties - complete with Christmas lights, balloons, crepe paper, and beer. And there are failures aplenty, big and small, from forgetting lines in a sixth-grade play to hospitalizations for debilitating strokes. There are also the egregious failures of the human spirit - betrayal, infidelity, arson, sexual abuse; this novel surveys the landscape where husbands cheat on wives, where school principals consort with students, and where boys impregnate their brothers' girlfriends. Evil is not elsewhere, alas, but right there within the human heart, and all in the family, unfortunately.
Boswell has written an American tale, replete with the violence and plastic commercialism that infect his characters. Yet somehow the book doesn't quite feel tragic. Despite the inner
... (1992 of 16982 Characters)
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