|













after silence
bones of the moon
black cocktail
a child across the sky
outside the dog museum
the panic hand
kissing the beehive
the land of laughs
the marriage of sticks
from the teeth of angels
sleeping in flame
voice of our shadow
the wooden sea
|

[ Featured Reviews ]
| Reviewed by
Publisher's Weekly |
January
08, 2001 |
Immensely popular abroad, Carroll
(The Marriage of Sticks) has yet to achieve commensurate stature on
his native shore. His latest novel combines George Perec's pleasure
in puzzles and Philip Dick's interest in metaphysics. Frannie McCabe
is the 47-year-old police chief of Crane's View, N.Y., who one day
adopts an old, three-legged stray dog. This is typical of his style,
as his wife, Magda, recognizes: "The more goofy they are, the more
you like them, huh, Fran?" The dog, Old Vertue, dies; the weirdness
begins when McCabe tries to bury him. The burial is interrupted by
a report about the perpetually battling Schiavo couple, who seem to
have tidied up and abandoned their usually squalid house. McCabe's
investigation of the domicile turns up a bizarrely patterned feather
which, along with the dog's carcass, reappears in the trunk of Magda's
car the next day, spooking McCabe. Even spookier, Pauline, McCabe's
stepdaughter, now has a tattoo that exactly matches the feather. Then
McCabe's world turns surreal: he is visited by his teenage self. The
adolescent McCabe, who had been a notorious delinquent, leads his
older self to Astropel, a black extraterrestrial. The aliens know
Crane's View has some connection to the cosmic puzzle of the universe
itself, but they need McCabe to figure out the specifics. Astropel
shuttles Frannie back and forth in time, piling up such clues as a
maniac Dutch millionaire from 2030 and a koan ("How do you row a boat
on a wooden sea?") pronounced by a dead high school girl. Carroll's
best set piece shows McCabe watching Crane's View physically fast
forward from the '60s to the '90s. Although the story's resolution
is weaker than its buildup, this wonderfully offbeat novel will further
augment Carroll's growing reputation as the pop writer's pop writer.
(Feb.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
|
| ©
Publisher's Weekly 2001 |
[
view book jacket covers ]
textlinks main | biography | bibliography | collaborate | interviews | commentary | blog
| exclusives
please feel free to contact
us with any comments, requests, questions or issues.
|