2008: #62 - The Plot Against America (Philip Roth)

Date July 18, 2008

13785037Book #62 was The Plot Against America by Philip Roth.  The back of the book reads:

In an astonishing feat of empathy and narrative invention, our most ambitious novelist imagines an alternate version of American history.

In 1940 Charles A. Lindbergh, heroic aviator and rabid isolationist, is elected President. Shortly thereafter, he negotiates a cordial “understanding” with Adolf Hitler, while the new government embarks on a program of folksy anti-Semitism.

For one boy growing up in Newark, Lindbergh’s election is the first in a series of ruptures that threaten to destroy his small, safe corner of America–and with it, his mother, his father, and his older brother.

As soon as you find out that the main character in this book is Philip Roth, a boy growing up in the same place and the same time as the author Roth, this book takes on the feel of a memoir.  Essentially, this book is not about the alternative world Roth has created by changing one election, but about how the Roth family lives and survives in this world.  Much of it is seen through the eyes of 9 year old Philip, but as he would explain it years later, as an adult.  The language and analysis of events is not that of a child’s.

The alternative history holds up pretty well, until the "bad days" begin.  At that point in the book, the narrative starts to fall apart as you get a straight summary of events of the next 10 days.  Is this by design? I’m not sure.  I felt like it interrupted the flow of the story.  I also felt like Roth cops out a bit at the end… I was expecting a story where Hitler wins and the world is forever changed.  What you get instead is just a blip in the WWII timeline… a delay of the events that really happened.

Overall, it was a good read and I’m glad I read it, despite the concentration it took to get through some of Roth’s run-on sentences.  Would I read another by him? Based on the writing style alone, no, but if the story interested me I’d pick it up regardless.

Page count: 391 | Word count: 139,610

2007: The Harlequin (Laurell K. Hamilton)
2006: M is for Malice (Sue Grafton)
2005: Blood Test (Jonathan Kellerman)

2008: Booking Thru Thursday - Vacation Spots

Date July 17, 2008

This week’s topic:

Another question inspired by the Bunch of Grapes on Martha’s Vineyard having burned down on the Fourth of July.

Do you buy books while on vacation/holiday?

Do you have favorite bookstores that you only get to visit while away on a trip?

What/Where are they?

I don’t generally buy books when I’m on vacation, but I certainly bring plenty with me!  I tend to bring a book for ever 2 days I’m going to be gone, which is usually overkill, but I hate being caught without one!

I don’t really consider going to visit my parents in Nashville a "vacation", but I do occasionally hit a couple of used bookstores when I’m heading in that direction.  One is The Book Cellar in Crossville, TN.  It is a *great* used book store… humongous selection, and good prices.  Most of the paperbacks are less than half off.  Another one I’ve visited is Book Attic in Goodlettsville, TN.

We also stop at the Green Valley Book Fair in Harrisonburg, VA if we happen to be passing by when it’s open. I love that place. I once bought a set of all of the Sherlock Holmes books, in hardcover, for $14. You can’t beat that!