Two Recent Reads
I recently finished two
good novels that, on the surface, have little in common, but which actually
share some similar aspects. The Life We Bury by Allen Eskens is told
in the voice of college student Joe Talbert, for whom every day is a battle of
sorts. He works two jobs to put
himself through school and pay his rent, with little real time for anything
else except studying; however, his alcoholic mother calls when she periodically
lands herself in jail or wants to go off for a wild weekend with her latest
man, leaving Joe to care for his autistic younger brother, which just about
puts Joe over the edge. These
events get sidelined in the plot when Joe reaches out to a local nursing home
for a subject for his English class biography assignment. He meets Carl Iverson, a man who has
been released from prison to die there from the cancer that is eating him
up. Carl, it turns out, is a
convicted murderer, who wants to tell his story – and proclaim his innocence –
to Joe. Much of the rest of the
book is Joe’s investigation of the events and the people who sent Carl to
prison. Joe investigates with a
fellow student, neighbor and eventual love interest, Lily, while juggling his
other issues.
Trapeze
by Simon Mawer tells the story of
Marion Sutro, a 19 year old British girl who is a native French speaker, thanks
to her French mother. It is WWII
and, because of her linguistic abilities, she is recruited by the Special
Operations branch of the British government for training as an agent to support
the resistance movement. After
significant training, she is dropped into the French countryside where she
assumes a new identity and becomes a courier. A secondary mission involves reconnecting with an old family
friend, a French physicist, whom the British want to recruit to come and help
them develop a bomb. Her mission
is complicated by her girlhood crush on the physicist, a man 10 years her
senior, and by a friendship with another agent whom she befriended during her
training.
Although the books seem a
world apart, there is the idea of shifting identities in both. Carl is known to the world as the
rapist/murderer of the young girl who lived next door to him. To his old war buddy, he a decorated
veteran, an ethical man who would never have done the crime for which he was
convicted. To Joe, he is,
initially, a dying, old man who provides raw material for an assignment. Who is Carl, really? As Trapeze
begins, Marian is a fairly innocent young girl who sees her recruitment as an
adventure. Once in training, she
is renamed Anne Marie; the persona she assumes in France is Alice, and by the
end of the book, she takes yet another identity. While name changes are superficial, the roles that she
inhabits are not. With each comes
both an invented background and a wiser and more mature Marian. As she looks back at the girl she once
was, she constantly asks herself, “Who am I now?”
Another common element
these novels share is a main character who is naïve to the danger that comes
with the path s/he has chosen.
Marian is caught up in the romance of being a spy. Even though the training she does is
rigorous, the whole experience remains an exciting adventure. Bolstered by the ease with which she
maneuvers around the south of France, she is unprepared for Nazi-occupied Paris
and the threats it presents.
Over-confidence becomes a liability. Joe, in The Life We
Bury, loses track of the reason he is meeting with Carl and becomes caught
up in an investigation of the past to determine Carl’s true involvement (or
lack thereof) in the crime. He
blunders forward, becoming obsessed with finding out the truth, with little
regard for the fact that there are those who would prefer to leave the past
alone.
The Life We Bury is a solid 3-stars; if you like mysteries, it’s a good, quick
read. The family problems that Joe
experiences seem, at times, like an unnecessary complication, and the sometimes
ease with which he is able to discover old information is a little surprising,
but I still recommend the book. I
listened to Trapeze (an audio
download from the library), and, of course, hearing the novel is a different reading
experience, but I thought it was well written, with a strong narrative voice
and a plot that had momentum. I
was pleasantly surprised that Mawer so capably inhabited the voice of a
woman. I was also pleased to learn
that there is a sequel that is already on my amazon wish list.
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