home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME - Man of the Year
/
CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
/
moy
/
010692
/
0106470.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-08-28
|
3KB
|
89 lines
BOOKS, Page 74BEST OF 1991
FICTION
1. THE GOLD BUG VARIATIONS by Richard Powers.
Back in the late 1950s, Stuart Ressler was one of the
eager young scientists trying to crack the genetic code of the
DNA molecule. In the mid-'80s, he works the night shift for a
computer billing outfit in Brooklyn. What brought Ressler to
this dead-end job? That is only one of the questions posed and
answered by this demanding, dazzling novel. Also on display are
two love stories, two intertwined narratives, vast erudition and
a white-knuckled, suspense-filled investigation into the meaning
of life.
2. MATING by Norman Rush.
A down-on-her-luck American anthropologist in Botswana
decides it is high time to find a spouse. Into her frame of
reference comes Nelson Denoon, who is handsome, charismatic and
doing worthy work for indigenous women in the Kalahari Desert.
Her narrative of what happens next -- and next -- is both
uproariously funny and deeply serious, a long courtship of highs
and lows played against an exotic, meticulously described
African landscape.
3. IMMORTALITY by Milan Kundera.
Out of a story about contemporary neuroses -- as displayed
by four Parisians, two males and two females unhappy in
interesting ways -- Kundera creates a free-form fictional
context in which everything, including an imaginary conversation
between Goethe and Ernest Hemingway, can be claimed to matter.
The Czech author indulges his obsessive itch to tell all without
ever turning out a dull or obfuscatory page.
4. A DANGEROUS WOMAN by Mary McGarry Morris.
The thirtysomething Martha Horgan makes an odd heroine,
lacking, as she does, all the protective and intuitive senses
society demands. Her job at the local dry cleaner is so
comforting, compared to the rest of her daily experiences, that
Martha often shows up on her day off. Morris triumphantly evokes
the sad, vivid life of a character excluded, for reasons she
cannot grasp, from the magic circle of friendship and family.
5. MAO II by Don DeLillo.
Will the overpopulated future offer any room or even
sanction for the individual consciousness? Bill Gray, 63, a
famously reclusive author, ponders this question as the outside
world beckons him to go public. What awaits him there, as his
dark imaginings foretell, are terrorists, those who have
usurped the novelists' authority and now "make raids on human
consciousness." This meeting is unforgettable, thanks to
DeLillo's terse, electric dialogue and descriptive passages of
insidious beauty.
LESSER MOMENTS IN PUBLISHING I
Most disarming self-critique by the author of a runaway
best seller: "Margaret Mitchell is a better writer. But she's
dead."
Alexandra Ripley, author of Scarlett
Most depressing final words in a novel of more than 1,300
pages: "To be continued."
Norman Mailer, Harlot's Ghost
Most welcome final words in a gory thriller of nearly 800
pages: "Killed enough?" Ryan slid the sword back into its sheath
and let it fall to his side. "Yes, Your Highness. I think we
all have."
Tom Clancy, The Sum of All Fears