Showing posts sorted by date for query tom rachman. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query tom rachman. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, June 9, 2018

The Italian Teacher

Title:  The Italian Teacher
Author:  Tom Rachman
Publication Information:  Publisher. Date. pages.
ISBN:  073522269X / 978-0735222694

Book Source:  I received this book through the Penguin First to Read program free of cost in exchange for an honest review.

Opening Sentence:  "Seated in a copper bathtub, Bear Bavinsky dunks his head under steaming water and shakes out his beard, flinging droplets across the art studio"

Favorite Quote:  "What is have never been what ought ... You pose an is/ought question. When I was younger, I dabbled in 'oughts.' I have retired to 'is.'"

The Italian teacher, Charles "Pinch" Bavinsky, is an artist. Or at one time, he was an artist. Or at the very least, at one time, he wanted to be an artist. He is at one time also an academic and an author. He ends up as a teacher.

Pinch is the child of two artists. His father "Bear" Bavinskly is a painter and a big personality. He is also world famous and completely self-involved. Pinch's mother Natalie is a sculptor, who fades under Bear's shadow. Pinch's life is a testament to trying to gain his father's approval and recognition.

His half-sister Birdie takes a different approach. She advises Pinch to not look for that personal connection with his father. "When you see what he accomplished ... maybe he was right how he acted. Would it be better if he’d shown up for softball games ... without doing what he knew, knew, would be so great? It’s bigger than us. Bigger than us, Charlie…” In real life, is there a balance possible? I would like to think so. In Bear's narcissistic life, there is not. In Birdie's life, it is acceptable for there  not to be balance. In Pinch's life, there is a hope that it may come one day.

The book follows the trajectory of Pinch's life in four sections - childhood, youth, adulthood, and old age. Childhood is spend in artistic endeavors waiting for Bear's visits for Bear is not a permanent fixture in his life. He comes and goes and has an entire life separate from Pinch and his mother; he has in fact fathered more than ten children with several different women!

Pinch lights up with his father's attention, and tries to hold on to his father. That becomes the theme of his life. He takes up painting only to give it up because of his father. He tries to find a place in Bear's other life only to see that it does not exist. He tries to write a biography of his father only to give it up because of his father. So it continues until almost the end of the book. The ending, when it comes, is surprising and, in retrospect, completely fitting.

This book reminds me in some ways of The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. Both books begin with this little boy being batted around by circumstances completely out of his control. As a reader, he elicits that sympathy and that feeling that he needs to be protected. Both books follow the trajectory of the boy's life, centering sections around different phases of life. Both characters spend their lives seeking something out of reach. In Pinch's case, it is his father's approval and attention; it is an existence in his father's life.

This book is sad, but not quite as sad as The Goldfinch. Both good and bad things happen to Pinch in his life. He makes both good and bad choices. He forms some relationships that last. Through all the good and the bad choices, I care about Pinch and what happens to him.

That is the skill of Tom Rachman's writing. The characters feel so real. I find myself searching for "Bear Bavinsky" to see if he may have existed or if he may have been based on a historical aritst. The book is pure fiction, but it feels as if it is a real story about real people.


Please share your thoughts and leave a comment. I would love to "talk" to you.

Monday, June 9, 2014

The Rise & Fall of Great Powers: A Novel

Title:  The Rise & Fall of Great Powers: A Novel
Author:  Tom Rachman
Publication Information:  The Dial Press. 2014. 384 pages.
ISBN:  0679643656 / 978-0679643654

Book Source:  I received this book through a publisher's giveaway free of cost in exchange for an honest review.

Favorite Quote:  "Friends required a life story. Your past mattered only if others sought to know it - it was they who demanded that one possessed a history. Alone, you could do without."

In the first three chapters of this book, we meet Tooly Zylberberg at three points in her life.

In 2011, Tooly is thirty-something and living a quiet life. She owns a small bookstore in the Welsh countryside. Her bookstore does not generate an income to sustain itself; yet, Tooly seems to have an independent source of income. She seems to have no ties to anyone except for Fogg, who works in the bookstore. Yet, she spends considerable time searching the people of her past on the Internet.

In 1999, Tooly is a young-adult living in New York City, somewhat adrift but finding herself a place among the students of the city.

In 1988, Tooly is a young girl moving from place to place with Paul, who may or may not be her father. Paul is somewhat absent-minded and has a reason that he cannot go home. So, he takes on a job that requires him to move every year to two years. Tooly moves along with him and then beyond him.

The story shifts between the three time periods consistently throughout the book. The characters start to overlap between the time periods. Each section tells a little bit more about Tooly's life that helps create more sense out of either the past or the future.

The book is a bit like putting together a jigsaw puzzle - you have bits and pieces that don't seem to belong. Yet, as you fit more and more pieces in, a picture emerges. To some extent, that seems to be Tooly's journey as an adult - to try and make sense of her disheveled life.

What I love about the book is the character of Tooly, particularly as a child. I want to reach out and protect her from some of the adults in her life and from the life she led as a child. I find myself cheering for the adults who do reach out and provide a stability in her life.

What I also love is the writing. The changing time periods and the overlapping characters make the book difficult to follow at times. I find myself flipping often to the chapter titles, which identify the time period. Yet, at the same time, the writing weaves it all together like a tapestry, and Tooly's character throughout is the binding force of the book.

What I do not enjoy about the story is the fact that the book implies a great mystery about Tooly's life as a child. The book description even says, "Tooly ... believes she will never understand the true story of her own life." Yet, her life story - one of adults who don't behave in the best interest of a child - is not that extreme and not that unusual. As a result, I find the mystery and its resolution at the end disappointing.


Please share your thoughts and leave a comment. I would love to "talk" to you.