lisa_goldstein: (pic#11299236)
Thursbitch, by Alan Garner — The worst thing about this book is the title, which seems to refer to a disagreeable woman who visits every Thursday.  The only reason I picked it up was because it’s by Alan Garner, the man who wrote all those wonderful YA books like The Weirdstone of Brisingamen and The Owl Service and Red Shift, and I’m very glad I did.  Thursbitch turns out to be a place, and Garner is matchless at conjuring up a landscape, a writer who knows every ridge and brook and stone his characters encounter.

Jack lives in 1755 and travels far from home to bring back wonders for his family: his father and mother and wife or partner Nan Sarah.  He’s also something of a shaman; he cooks up a drink out of mushrooms and serves it to the townspeople, then becomes the central figure in a ritual involving the death and rebirth of a bull.

Ian and Sal live in the present, and are connected in ways large and small to Jack and Nan Sarah.  Sal is dying of some horrible progressive disease, and she wants to see as much of the area as she can, while there’s still time.  As with Garner’s earlier Red Shift, past and present here are fluid, one flowing into the other.  Sal’s journey and Nan Sarah’s echo and re-echo, and so do Ian’s and Jack’s, and each has something to say to the other.

I spent maybe too much time wondering about Jack’s religion.  At first, because of the bull, I thought it was Mithraism, brought over by the Roman soldiers stationed in England and then changed and modified over two millennia.  There are other symbols that fit, like bees and constellations (at least according to Wikipedia), but not all of them.  Now I think it comes partly from real rites and customs and partly from Garner’s imagination.  It’s utterly believable, though — if he made up the songs and myths and rituals scattered throughout the story, and I think he did, he’s even more amazing than I thought.

Spoonbenders, by Darryl Gregory — I considered putting this on last year’s list but for some reason I didn’t.  Then I kept thinking about it.  The thing that really impressed me was the plotting, which, because of a character who can see the future, has to go off like clockwork.  The character, Buddy, works slowly and meticulously toward an end that only he knows, and Gregory manages to make every part of his intricate plan come together as perfectly as a Rube Goldberg machine.

There’s more to the novel than just that, of course.  Almost everyone in the Telemachus family has some psychic ability, so you’d expect them to be famous or at least rich from investing in the stock market.  It doesn’t work that way, though — poor Buddy, for example, can barely figure out what time he’s in.  Another character, his sister Irene, can tell when someone’s lying, but this proves less helpful than you would think, especially when she’s on a date.  It’s an unusual take on psychic powers.

All of the characters are interesting and believable and true to life, if life included people with psychic powers.  And the book’s very funny in places.  I especially liked the scene where Irene applies for a job and realizes her prospective employer is lying to her.  It’s truly satisfying, and highly recommended for people who hate job interviews.

A Skinful of Shadows, by Frances Hardinge — Makepeace has a terrifying talent: she can feel the souls of the dead reaching out to her, trying to take her over.  Her family might be able to help, but her mother refuses to talk about them, hinting only that they’re dangerous.  Then her mother dies, and Makepeace goes looking for her father.

Her mother was right, of course.  Makepeace finds the family home, which has the wonderful name of Grizehayes, and the first thing they do is lock her in a tower.  And there’s something wrong with them, at least the older ones: “It feels…when I look into his eyes…it’s like when the dead things in my nightmares…” Makepeace says to her half-brother, the only person there who treats her kindly.  She knows she has to escape, but how?

The action moves swiftly, as Makepeace escapes from one danger only to find another one waiting.  She’s a terrific character, stubborn, resourceful, doing the best she can with what little information she has.  And she has one other thing going for her — early in her journey she attracted the soul of a dying bear, and now it lives within her.  I loved this part — there are any number of times in life where a fierce and powerful bear can be a great help.

Jackalope Wives and Other Stories, by Ursula Vernon — Some of these stories subvert a fairy tale or a folksong, or, in the case of “Godmother,” all the fairy tales at once.  Some sound like folktales passed down from one generation to the next.  Some cross the line between animal and human so effortlessly that you barely notice it when an animal starts to talk.  Sometimes the prose turns into poetry.  All the characters are worth knowing, even the witch who finds the company of bug-eating plants “congenial.”  All of these are tales from a true story-teller, beautifully told. (More here

The Intuitionist, by Colson Whitehead — The Intuitionist is a less ambitious and weighty book than Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad, but I liked its strange charm.  It conjures up a world where, as I wrote, “elevators have all the allure and excitement of the automobile industry.”  Lila Mae Watson is the first black woman hired by the Department of Elevator Inspectors, and when an elevator she inspected crashes she decides to investigate.  “Along the way she discovers other groups and other conspiracies, friends and foes and spies, and an astonishing truth about the founding of elevator science.”  It’s a lot of fun, but it can be serious too, and like The Underground Railroad it has things to say about race and racism. (More here.) 
——
I don’t know why I only found five books to recommend this year — and one of them, as I said, I read the year before.  There were other books I liked, perfectly good books, but none of them gave me that feeling of reading a really great book, as if you’re watching someone balance across a gossamer tightrope, your mouth open in amazement at every step.

lisa_goldstein: (pic#11299236)
I’m on a roll here, so I went from The Intuitionist to another book by Colson Whitehead, Apex Hides the Hurt.  It’s about a man who thinks up names for products, though interestingly enough we never learn his own name.  (“Apex” is what he came up with for a type of Band-Aid.)  He’s hired to resolve a dispute over the name of a small town, and finds himself caught up in a long-simmering feud among three factions.  One consists of the descendants of the ex-slaves who founded the town and called it Freedom; another is represented by the last member of the family who brought industry to the town and re-named it after themselves, Winthrop; and the third is an entrepreneur with grandiose plans who wants to call it New Prospera.  (One of the reasons the narrator is hired is because he’s black himself, and so it’s thought he could be fairer than most to the Freedom faction.)

As befits a book about names and words, the prose style is limber, pyrotechnic, often brilliant — and very, very funny.  A conversation with a bartender:

“‘What kind of business do you do?’

‘Consulting.’

Con-sulting,’ the bartender repeated, as if his customer had added some new perversity to the catalog of known and dependable perversities.”

Here’s a library about to be turned into a clothing outlet: “He glanced up at the Latin phrase engraved above the Winthrop Library’s doorway.  That was going to have to go, unless it was Latin for Try Our New Stirrup Pants.”

And: “Lily Peet-Esposito … was a connoisseur of jokes describing the cultural misunderstandings that arose when religious leaders of different faiths unexpectedly found themselves on life rafts and desert islands.”

And: “It was one of those buildings where there was one bank of elevators for one half of the building and another set of elevators for the other half.  It was hard to escape the idea that the world of the elevators not taken was better, more glamorous, with butlers and canapés and such.”  [Somewhere in the world a grad student is writing a thesis on “The Use of Elevators in the Fiction of Colson Whitehead.”]

The narrator is aloof, sardonic, someone who understands everyone’s problems but his own.  (If there’s ever a movie made of this book — unlikely, since most of the fun is in its prose — the narrator should be played by Lakeith Stanfield, the cool, sophisticated black party-goer in Get Out.  That’s how I imagined him, anyway.)  His cluelessness gets tiring after a while — you want him to figure out, at least a little, where he’s going wrong in his life — but for the most part that doesn’t interfere with the enjoyment.

lisa_goldstein: (pic#11299236)
The Intuitionist conjures up a world where elevators have all the allure and excitement of the automobile industry.  There are elevator conventions hyping the newest models, magazines with names like Lift, and prizes like the Werner von Siemans Award for Outstanding Work in Elevator Innovation.

Elevator safety is crucial here, of course, and as a child Lila Mae Watson dreams of becoming an elevator inspector.  She grows up to attend the Midwestern Institute for Vertical Transport, where she reads Theoretical Elevators, Volumes 1 and 2 by James Fulton, and falls under the sway of the Intuitionist school.  Intuitionists believe in “communicating with the elevator on a non-material basis”; they conduct their inspections by listening to the elevator, feeling the vibrations as it climbs, and imagining the machinery working.  Opposing them are the more conventional Empiricists, and the two factions struggle for control of the Elevator Guild.

Watson becomes the first black woman hired by the Department of Elevator Inspectors.  Then the worst happens: an elevator that she inspected crashes.  She is convinced that she was set up, that the elevator was sabotaged after she looked at it.  For one thing, she's distrusted by most of her coworkers.  For another the timing is suspicious: Guild elections are coming up, and with this accident the entire Intuitionist camp is thrown into disrepute. She decides to investigate.  Along the way she discovers other groups and other conspiracies, friends and foes and spies, and an astonishing truth about the founding of elevator science.

You would think you’d run out of things to say about elevators after a while, but Whitehead’s invention never flags.  He just keeps going, spinning out this improbable world, as serious and deadpan as Buster Keaton.  Inspectors have recognizable uniforms, and even a preferred hairstyle.  A coworker of Watson’s studies escalators, a less prestigious specialty but one with more job security.  Guild members attend banquets, where they eat and drink and watch entertainment and make boozy passes at dancing Safety Girls.  (Women are not welcome, of course, and as for black women — well, when Watson goes undercover as a waitress, her coworkers fail to recognize her.)

The whole book is a delight.  It’s less serious and ambitious than The Underground Railroad, of course, but like that book it has things to say about race and racism.  “There is another world beyond this one,” wrote James Fulton, and some people think that he wasn’t talking about elevators.

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