Tuesday, February 3, 2015

THE LUMINARIES-a review


In The Luminaries, [Little, Brown, & Co, 2013] Eleanor Catton is a very young author [born 1985] who writes in a very old way. The combination is illuminating.

Catton is the totally omniscient narrator, as total as it gets. She not only tells us the actions of each character, but why they are acting that way, from childhood on. It’s sort of like reading Thackeray’s Vanity Fair.

The Luminaries was published in 2013, when she was 28. She probably started writing The Luminaries when she was about 23. Considering the amount of research that must have gone into it, and the work to get the voices just right, it’s a remarkable tour de force for such a young author. It certainly deserved the Man Booker Prize it nabbed in 2013.

Her first novel, The Rehearsal, was her 2008 master’s thesis at Victoria U in Wellington. She also received a fellowship to the Iowa Writer’s Workshop.

The Luminaries is set in the 1866 New Zealand gold rush. It is a combination historical, mystery, astrological, psychological… something. I don’t mean that in a bad way; I just can’t think of the proper word. It’s not mish-mash or confetti. Catton is a good string-of-beads story teller.

The conclusion is a bit disappointing, ragged and unfinished feeling, but most novel endings are a bit of a letdown. Maybe that’s why the book feels about a hundred pages too long. [Take out a hundred and it would still be a very long book for its type.]

Catton, in the old fashioned way, tells us at the start of each chapter what will occur in it. Toward the end the “contents” for each chapter are longer than the chapter.

I seem always to read the second book of a bright new author before the first, which in the case of Catton was The Rehearsal. This is because my daughters don’t give me an author’s first book. This 2nd book was a gift of Mary Beth. But Catton is a gifted author. I look forward to reading her first book second.


John Robert McFarland

Daughter Katie Kennedy’s Learning to Swear in America will be published by J. K. Rowling’s publisher, Bloomsbury Press, in 2015.

My novel, VETS, about four handicapped and homeless Iraqistan veterans who are accused of murdering a VA doctor, will be published by Black Opal Books in 2015.

In case you missed it, a Tweet Repeat:

I tweet as yooper1721.

I also write Christ in Winter: Reflections on Faith from a Place of Winter for the Years of Winter. http://christinwinter.blogspot.com/

MY OTHER BOOKS:

NOW THAT I HAVE CANCER I AM WHOLE: Reflections on Life and Healing for Cancer Patients and Those Who Love Them [AndrewsMcMeel & HarperAudio, with Czech and Japanese translations] Paul K. Hamilton, MD, the co-founder of CanSurmount, called it “The best book for cancer patients, by a cancer patient, ever.”

AN ORDINARY MAN [HarperPaperbacks] Randall MacLane just wanted to be an ordinary man. But sent with a message for Custer, he became a drifting lawman with a knack for killing, and a deep well of loneliness. Then a twist of fate brought him full circle…

THE STRANGE CALLING: Stories of Ministry [Smyth&Helwys] I didn’t want to be a preacher, but I made a deal with God to save my sister’s life. Was that really a “call,” though? I said, “I’ll try t for 50 years, and if I still don’t know, I’ll do something else.” These are stories of what happened in those years of questioning the call.

WHEN FATHER RODE THE MAIL and Other Stories of Christmas [lulu.com] ISBN 978-1-300-38566-0

If you like baseball poetry, take a look at “Frosty & the Babe” http://www.baseball-almanac.com/poetry/frosty_and_the_babe.shtml



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