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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1079>
<title>
Aug. 22, 1994: Books:Odd Cousin, Far Removed
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 84
Odd Cousin, Far Removed
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A novel by master craftsman Peter Taylor continues a tradition
of humor, rue and storytelling smarts
</p>
<p>By Martha Duffy
</p>
<p> All Tennessee is divided into three parts. To the ordinary historian,
they are eastern, middle and western. But that misses all the
savor. As Nathan Longfort identifies them, the subdivisions
are the Lost State of Franklin, the area in the eastern part
of the state that was once part of North Carolina; Miro, once
governed by Spaniards, in the center; and the Purchase, farther
west. Similar distinctions apply to families. On his mother's
side, Longfort is a Virginia-Tennessean, on his father's, a
Carolina-Tennessean. You can tell the difference by whether
a person refers to a cabinet as a "cupboard" or a "press."
</p>
<p> In the Tennessee Country (Knopf; 226 pages; $21) by Peter Taylor,
the writer of shrewd, laconic short stories whose previous novel
won the Pulitzer Prize, revels in such delineations. He writes
of a society grounded in family and memory of the Civil War.
Nathan's father was named for Confederate general Braxton Bragg,
and many years later he gives his own youngest boy the same
name. Trudie, Nathan's mother, was the youngest of the three
buoyant, beautiful Tucker sisters, all widowed early, who dominate
the hero's childhood and the first half of this funny, rueful
novel of morals and manners. The other figure who keeps recurring
and who comes to obsess Nathan is the women's brooding "outside"--or illegitimate--cousin, Aubrey Bradshaw.
</p>
<p> Eventually, Nathan finds out that as a teenager his mother was
in love with Aubrey; in fact he paid court to all three girls.
Nathan first becomes aware of him, though, during a train trip
carrying the body of Nathan's grandfather, a U.S. Senator, from
Washington to Knoxville. Aubrey was not welcome aboard, and
the Tucker sisters, now young matrons, are particularly appalled
by his efforts to join the funeral party. The journey is one
of Taylor's best comic set pieces, a deadpan account of how
the drunken antics of the male mourners caused a series of unseemly
disasters.
</p>
<p> After that, Aubrey simply disappears, though Nathan believes
he sometimes sees him, usually at funerals. The rest of In the
Tennessee Country follows Nathan's adult life. Though Trudie
wanted him to become an artist, he settles for being an art
historian, and Taylor makes an elegant sketch of the bramble
of academic politics. On his retirement, Nathan becomes preoccupied
with Aubrey to the degree that his son Brax, who really is a
painter, becomes bored and annoyed. It is Brax who finds Aubrey,
now a dying ancient, and Brax who chooses finally to follow
his path and live far away, independent of his family.
</p>
<p> One can admire Taylor for the sublime tact of his writing; no
one's behavior, however bizarre, causes a ripple in Nathan's
gentle but exacting account. The problem lies with Aubrey. He
repudiates the Tuckers and the hypocrisy that kept him a true
outsider. "Compromise," he intones. "That's their rule of life."
And he blames Nathan for being "part of the world he was born
into."
</p>
<p> Taylor seems to agree, but the evidence elsewhere is that Nathan
lacked the talent to be an artist and that he has dealt honestly
with his own work and his family. And it is disappointing not
to learn what Aubrey did all those years during his disappearance
except gnaw at old wounds. It seems a vague, washy ending for
a work that glories in the charm of specificity.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>