The search for a missing youth jump-starts Busch's brooding latest,
a loose sequel to his 1997 stunner, Girls. Jack, the itinerant
security guard who appears in Girls and (otherwise named) in the
earlier short story "Ralph the Duck," is drawn away from his latest
gig at a Carolina resort by a request from Manhattan attorney Merle
Davidoff: to find her vagrant nephew Tyler Pearl, an inveterate
gambler last seen in an upstate New York area Jack knows all too
well. Returning to the hamlet of Vienna, where, years before, he
and local police had failed to locate the body of a murdered girl,
Jack surrenders again to his obsessive fixation with "kids gone
missing and kids gone dead"-an obsession magnified by the deaths of
his own wife and daughter, and the burden of guilt that surrounds
those losses. Reconnecting with black state trooper Elway Bird,
who's now dying of leukemia, and Elway's wife Sarah (with whom Jack
has a more intimate history), he gradually uncovers evidence of
"dope farming" and learns all he needs to know and more about
transplanted Vermonter Clarence Smith and seductive rich-girl
freelance journalist Georgia Bromell, as the story moves toward a
violent climax, another bitter loss and a (painfully unconvincing)
flurry of reconciliations and promises. North, which resembles a
Ross McDonald mystery more closely than anything else Busch has
written, is well worth reading: it's filled with potent atmospheric
effects, wrenching dialogue, and a sure sense of its middle-aged
protagonist's weary apprehension of the facts of his limits and his
mortality. But it's weakened by Jack's genre-mannered narrator's
voice, and a thudding overemphasis on the theme from which Busch
can't seem to free himself: that life is brutal and dangerous, and
we cannot protect our loved ones from its ravages. We've heard it
all before, in earlier, better books. This writer's failures are
indeed more interesting than many of his contemporaries' successes.
Still, North is a disappointment. (Kirkus Reviews)
Combining the pace of a detective story with the bold prose of a
master storyteller, North is both an adventure and a pilgrimage.
Alone and haunted by memories of his dead wife and child, Jack who
prowled the backwaters of "Girls" returns to upstate New York from
the Carolina coast, where he has been working as a security guard.
A New York lawyer hires him to find her missing nephew, last seen
in the area of Jack's northern hometown. His search gradually
uncovers a dark underside of rural life and a cast of dangerous
characters. Jack is besieged by memories as he uncovers a brutal
crime and finds himself in a turbulent relationship with a
treacherous woman. In trying to save another's life, Jack must
relive his own; memory, obsession, and reality fuse; and Jack
discovers the truth of Faulkner's observation that "the past is not
really past; it's not even over."
General
Imprint: |
W W Norton & Co Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
May 2005 |
First published: |
May 2005 |
Authors: |
Frederick Busch
|
Dimensions: |
244 x 165 x 30mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
320 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-393-05103-2 |
Categories: |
Books >
Social sciences >
Education >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-393-05103-X |
Barcode: |
9780393051032 |
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