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    -Artists take a back seat to accountants

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    The Year in Review 1998
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  • Critic's Choice: Year's Best Fiction

    By Gail Caldwell, Globe Staff, 12/06/98

    Tom Wolfe
    "A Man in Full"

    Say what you will about the man's high-lit pretensions: No other novel this year is as funny, exacting, or cursedly ambitious.
    Contemplating the millennium can be a cruel pastime for ministers of culture, filling them with self-regard and a tendency toward pop revisionism. (Y2K notwithstanding, it will only get worse.) As the light fades over the 20th century, trend-spotters, journalists, and other ne'er-do-wells begin to make even more lists than usual -- groupings of cataclysmic events, great leaps forward, novels momentous but unread. I refer in particular to this year's stunningly aggrandized contribution from Random House's Modern Library, which nudged its editorial board into naming (and ranking) the 100 best English-language novels of the century. Sales of "Ulysses,'' which headed the list, no doubt enjoyed a brisk little field day, though I suspect few people rushed out to get "The Magnificent Ambersons,'' unless it was to rent the video. Then the Radcliffe Publishing Course, determined not to be outdone in quasi-democratic literary pursuits, countered with its own list, including two titles by (!) Ayn Rand.

    Ah, well. This donnybrook was great fun for the arguments it inspired, among them Richard Ford's dismissing the Joyce choice as (sniff) the triumph of academic modernism. You will see no such fur-flying here, if only because this list is both humbler (bookended around a mere 12 months) and more grandiose (decided by a voting jury of one). First, though, to the year itself -- which promised much, delivered less, but still managed to slightly enhance and advance the state of fiction.

    It hasn't been the gentlest of times, what with Wal-Mart suing Amazon.com, Amazon.com appropriating the palpable art of browsing, and Barnes & Noble trying to take over the world. Certainly 1998 had its share of dramas, amusements, and upsets. In an odd act that seemed part misguided hubris and part bad taste, Pat Conroy snared the assignment of writing the sequel to "Gone with the Wind.'' Gordon Lish, a master of hubris and bad taste in his own fiction, was reported to have had more creepy control over Raymond Carver's stories than anyone, including Carver, would have liked. The fatwah against Salman Rushdie was lifted just long enough for him to exhale and lose his British police guard; then a new edict announced he was still under death threat, probably forever.

    The complete Oxford English Dictionary went on line, making those of us with old-fashioned, clutterbug libraries feel more Luddite than ever. Brit babe Bridget Jones, Helen Fielding's fictional creation who can't find her pantyhose or a boyfriend, grabbed her 15 minutes in the sun (and on the bestseller lists), even if her diary did induce the mildly amused horror of half the women in America. Tom Wolfe's long-awaited "A Man in Full'' enjoyed a seven-figure printing and a National Book Award nomination before the damn thing was even in the stores. Wolfe, who in those 700-plus rip-snorting pages lets his own red dog off the leash, still couldn't stop the quieter animal of Alice McDermott, whose upset win at the National Book Awards was a sweet victory for literary fiction.

    And that, really, suggested the kind of year 1998 was: full of big old novels and graceful surprises, where the acknowledged masters had to make room for the exquisite promise of newer applicants. Rarely have so many stars in contemporary fiction published in one season; rarer still was the number of disappointments from within that lofty realm. Russell Banks and Jane Smiley both turned their considerable sights toward the Civil War, but their efforts failed to sway this reviewer: Banks's huge novel about John Brown, "Cloudsplitter,'' while passionately wrought, lacks the grace and inner dimension of his previous work. Smiley's "The All-True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton'' achieves an intelligently realized picaresque ode to the 19th-century novel but just isn't very captivating. Richard Powers, whose cerebral gifts can either dazzle or dismay, mostly accomplished the latter in his commerce-ridden novel, "Gain.'' Anne Tyler wrote a Sweet 'n' Low story in "Patchwork Planet''; Nadine Gordimer composed a morally resonant but dry treatise in "The House Gun.'' In a misfire attempt to go existential tough-guy, Martin Amis wrote a miserable little mystery in "Night Train.'' Combining his sui generis brilliance with a gotcha subtext mirroring his personal life, Philip Roth blended history and malice in "I Married a Communist.'' And Tim O'Brien, who also ought to know better, created one of the most unsavory characters in recent memory in "Tomcat in Love.''

    All was not lost among such elevations: Toni Morrison's "Paradise,'' about the emotional legacies of an insulated Oklahoma community, is a complex, rhapsodic novel. William Trevor's inimitable sensibility hovers throughout the chilling story of "Death in Summer.'' In "Damascus Gate,'' Robert Stone wrote an intellectually rich novel about the madness -- religious, political, emotional -- of modern Jerusalem. John Updike finished off his satin-smooth, half-melancholy trilogy about Henry Bech, his Jewish doppelganger, in "Bech at Bay: A Quasi-Novel.'' Cormac McCarthy completed his Border Trilogy, on the mythic West of mid-century America, with "Cities of the Plain.'' And Richard Price surely produced the most high-throttle novel of the summer with his story of a child's disappearance in "Freedomland.''

    Ian McEwan, who won England's Booker Prize this fall for "Amsterdam,'' a smaller work, wrote a gorgeously creepy novel about obsession in "Enduring Love.'' In "The Antelope Wife,'' set among Native American generations in the Midwest, Louise Erdrich braided time and myth with love and tragedy. David Gates, acclaimed for the world-weary narrator of his first novel, "Jernigan,'' returned with equally wry mastery in "Preston Falls.'' John Edgar Wideman produced his usual mix of intelligence and passion in "Two Cities,'' set in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, while Barbara Kingsolver, in her vast story about the former Belgian Congo, delivered her best novel in years in "The Poisonwood Bible.''

    Jane Hamilton's "The Short History of a Prince'' captures her lovable protagonist -- a gay man who has returned home to the Midwest -- with prismatic depth. Widely admired for her story collection, "The Family Markowitz,'' Allegra Goodman turned her sights to a summer community of Orthodox Jews in upstate New York in her first novel, "Kaaterskill Falls.'' Ethan Canin managed an excellent friendship between a dentist and a self-destructive blackguard in "For Kings and Planets,'' while Dorothy Allison followed a rock 'n' roll star home to Georgia in "Cavedweller.'' The Irish playwright Sebastian Barry wrote a hauntingly mythic little novel about a man trying to find his way in from the seas of exile in "The Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty.'' And Daniel Menaker, beloved from his years as fiction editor of The New Yorker, wrote an uproarious portrait of a Freudian shrink and his mostly helpless analysand in "The Treatment.''

    For the crowd who likes its fiction cerebral, the year also offered intellectual bonbons from Peter Carey ("Jack Maggs,'' an homage to "Great Expectations''), Andrea Barrett ("The Voyage of the Narwhal,'' where science and self-awareness collide in the Arctic), Maureen Howard ("A Lover's Almanac,'' an ode to time and modernity), and Cathleen Schine ("The Evolution of Jane,'' where Darwin has a hand). There were new novels from old favorites, most notably Joyce Carol Oates's "My Heart Laid Bare,'' John Irving's "A Widow for One Year,'' and Patrick O'Brian's "The Hundred Days,'' as well as the prolific Louis Begley ("Mistler's Exit'') and Beryl Bainbridge ("Master Georgie''). Edwidge Danticat revisited Haiti for the bracing truths of "The Farming of Bones,'' while Gayl Jones, in "The Healing,'' returned with her first novel in decades.

    Some of the heroes were local in 1998, for New England had a pack of authors making welcome appearances, among them Howard Norman's "The Museum Guard,'' Elinor Lipman's "The Inn at Lake Devine,'' Eileen Pollack's "Paradise, New York,'' George Packer's "Central Square,'' Roland Merullo's "Revere Beach Boulevard,'' Jill McCorkle's "Final Vinyl Days,'' and -- oh, guv'nor! -- William F. Weld's "Mackerel by Moonlight.'' But most of us can't succeed in (commercial) art and politics alike, so we are forced to rely upon the mere sustenance of literature. Thank heavens, then, for the fine harvest of 1998: for the creative challenges sought and met, the ordinary moments exalted by such prose, and the splendid traces left across the sky.

    To the richest legacies -- the finest fiction -- of 1998, we offer these grateful accolades.

    "The Hours'' by Michael Cunningham (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $22). In this lovingly rendered homage to Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway,'' Cunningham weaves the discrete stories of three women into a subtle and stunning commentary on the power of art to influence and guide our paths. You get to reread "Mrs. Dalloway,'' too.

    "This Side of Brightness'' by Colum McCann (Metropolitan/Holt, $23). Opening with the exquisitely realized days of a homeless man in modern New York, McCann then cuts to the building of the subway tunnels at the start of the 20th century. The novel feels both monumental and luminescent, with a richness of physical and emotional detail that captures the span (and cruelty) of history within one man's story.

    "Charming Billy'' by Alice McDermott (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $21). Admirers of "That Night'' and "At Weddings and Wakes'' were thrilled when McDermott won the National Book Award for this novel, which possesses her usual stylistic resonance as well as her regard for the lure of the past. Billy himself is an Irish-American raconteur of heart-swelling proportion, not least because his story opens at his funeral.

    "Evening'' by Susan Minot (Knopf, $23). However commendable her previous work, "Evening'' is a quantum leap for Minot, returning to the choices and passions of a woman's life through her stream-of-consciousness memories on her deathbed. The novel renders these two modes of being -- the life lived and the death faced -- with equal authority, and with a beauty that eulogizes both.

    "Birds of America'' by Lorrie Moore (Knopf, $23). Shimmering with the reality of contemporary America, this collection of stories is by turns hilarious and profound; the dialogue is nearly always pitch-perfect, and at least two stories are on their way to being classics. "Birds of America'' accomplishes that task which is the ineffable joy of art: It makes your life feel a little bit wider when it's over.

    "The Love of a Good Woman'' by Alice Munro (Knopf, $24). Canada's great architect of the short story (in her hands, a cathedral) has given us eight powerful stories that owe their artistic mettle to Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner as well as to Chekhov. All set in the hinterlands of Ontario, they are thick as stone, and just as strong, and they have at their dark center a searingly truthful blend of chaos and grace.

    "A Man in Full'' by Tom Wolfe (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $28.95). Oh, that Virginia Tory turned double-agent. Nobody in Atlanta can trust Tom Wolfe anymore, nor should they: "A Man in Full'' is a scarily precise, epic portrayal of Georgia-cracker provincialism -- the New South in all its failed glory and comic disrepair. It also rides roughshod over the rest of contemporary America, from its high-rise boardrooms to the inside of a California prison. Say what you will about the man's high-lit pretensions: No other novel this year is as funny, exacting, or cursedly ambitious.

    This story ran on page C08 of the Boston Globe on 12/27/98. ) Copyright 1998 Globe Newspaper Company.



     


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