Heller McAlpin http://ktep.org en Farm Team Saga 'Class A' Hits It Out Of The Park http://ktep.org/post/farm-team-saga-class-hits-it-out-park Is there room for another book about America's favorite pastime? Lucas Mann's <em>Class A</em> earns a position in a lineup that already includes <em>Bang the Drum Slowly, The Natural</em>,<em> The Boys of Summer</em>,<em> Moneyball </em>and <em>The Art of Fielding</em> because, remarkably, it offers a fresh, unexpected angle on this well-trodden game.<p>Chances are you'll be hearing lots of cheers proclaiming Mann's genre-bending book a <em>Grand slam! Thu, 09 May 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 16454 at http://ktep.org Farm Team Saga 'Class A' Hits It Out Of The Park A 'Bargain Basement Molly Bloom' Looks Back On Eight Decades http://ktep.org/post/bargain-basement-molly-bloom-looks-back-eight-decades Back in the early 1950s, as a lonely, pregnant young wife already ruing her rash elopement, Edna O'Brien sobbed through the ending of Flaubert's <em>Madame Bovary</em> and wondered, "Why could life not be lived at that same pitch? Wed, 01 May 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 15892 at http://ktep.org A 'Bargain Basement Molly Bloom' Looks Back On Eight Decades Owls, Yes, But Also Kookaburras And Dentists In Sedaris' Latest http://ktep.org/post/owls-yes-also-kookaburras-and-dentists-sedaris-latest Plenty of personal essayists, including really good ones like Nora Ephron, Anna Quindlen and E.B. White, burn out or switch to fiction after a few books. Even Michel de Montaigne, the 16th century French writer often acknowledged as the father of the genre that combines intelligent reflection with anecdotes and autobiography, produced only one volume — albeit a massive one. Wed, 17 Apr 2013 14:09:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 14987 at http://ktep.org Owls, Yes, But Also Kookaburras And Dentists In Sedaris' Latest Minks, Perfume And Beastly Beauty In 'Shocked' http://ktep.org/post/minks-perfume-and-beastly-beauty-shocked Beauty can be a beast. That's one message from <em>Shocked</em>, Patricia Volk's smart, fascinating book about her complex relationship with her beautiful, elegantly attired, hypercritical mother.<p>Volk's delightful first memoir, <em>Stuffed</em>, which focused on her eccentric family of New York restaurateurs, was published just a year after the death, in 2000, of her 80-year-old father, Cecil Sussman Volk, longtime proprietor of Morgen's West Restaurant but also a sculptor, inventor and motorcycle enthusiast. Tue, 02 Apr 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 13924 at http://ktep.org Minks, Perfume And Beastly Beauty In 'Shocked' Learning 'Life' Lessons With McCorkle's Seniors http://ktep.org/post/learning-life-lessons-mccorkles-seniors Amid a literary landscape increasingly rife with metafictional and postmodern high jinks, Jill McCorkle's sixth novel, <em>Life After Life, </em>is as resolutely down to earth and unpretentious as the hot-dog franchise owned by one of her characters. For her first novel in 17 years, McCorkle has dared to write a heartwarmer that takes place largely in a retirement home and stresses the importance of good old-fashioned kindness.<p>(Oddly, McCorkle and Kate Atkinson both have novels called <em>Life After Life</em> coming out this spring, which is bound to cause some confusion. Wed, 27 Mar 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 13544 at http://ktep.org Learning 'Life' Lessons With McCorkle's Seniors Can This Hypercomplex 'Leopard' Change Its Spots? http://ktep.org/post/can-hypercomplex-leopard-change-its-spots What's a reader to believe, especially when confronted with an unreliable narrator? Which of the many versions spun by the self-confessed liar and aspiring writer in Kristopher Jansma's far-flung, deliberately far-fetched, hyper-inventive first novel, <em>The Unchangeable Spots of Leopards,</em> should we buy? Tue, 26 Mar 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 13463 at http://ktep.org Can This Hypercomplex 'Leopard' Change Its Spots? A New Focus On An Old Image In 'Mary Coin' http://ktep.org/post/new-focus-old-image-mary-coin Do you remember those school assignments where you were asked to make up a story based on a picture? With <em>Mary Coin</em>, Marisa Silver looks long and hard at an image that has been seared into our nation's consciousness — Dorothea Lange's iconic Depression-era photograph "Migrant Mother" — and compassionately imagines the lives behind it. The result is a fresh angle on the Great Depression and a lesson in learning how to really look and see.<p>Silver anchors her novel with research into Lange and her migrant subject, Florence Owens Thompson. Thu, 07 Mar 2013 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 12248 at http://ktep.org A New Focus On An Old Image In 'Mary Coin' Secrets, Lies And The Allure Of The Illicit http://ktep.org/post/secrets-lies-and-allure-illicit By the time Wendy Plump learned from a friend that her husband had a longtime mistress and an 8-month-old son living just a mile away, their union was already pockmarked with the scars of adultery — both his and hers. She divulges all this and more in <em>Vow, </em>her at times jaw-droppingly frank but ultimately instructive post-mortem on their 18-year marriage.<p>You may well wonder why someone would go public with such intimate, painful details of her personal life. Thu, 14 Feb 2013 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 10868 at http://ktep.org Secrets, Lies And The Allure Of The Illicit Writing Well Is The Wronged Wife's Revenge In 'See Now Then' http://ktep.org/post/writing-well-wronged-wifes-revenge-see-now-then On one level, <em>See Now Then, </em>Jamaica Kincaid's first novel in a decade, is a lyrical, interior meditation on time and memory by a devoted but no longer cherished wife and mother going about the daily business of taking care of her home and family in a small New England town. But it is also one of the most damning retaliations by a jilted wife since Nora Ephron's <em>Heartburn</em>. <em>See Now Then </em>reads as if Gertrude Stein and Virginia Woolf had collaborated on a heartbroken housewife's lament that reveals an impossible familiarity with <em>Heartburn </em>and Evan S. Tue, 05 Feb 2013 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 10225 at http://ktep.org Writing Well Is The Wronged Wife's Revenge In 'See Now Then' Finder's Keepers: 2012's Stories To Hang On To http://ktep.org/post/finders-keepers-2012s-stories-hang Part of a book critic's challenge is to sift through piles of new publications, panning for literary gold. In a way that makes us what one of my favorite children's book heroines, Astrid Lindgren's Pippi Longstocking, called a "turnupstuffer" — "Somebody who finds the stuff that turns up if only you look." Or like Dickens' optimistic Mr. Mon, 03 Dec 2012 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 6308 at http://ktep.org Finder's Keepers: 2012's Stories To Hang On To Famous Father Had Highest 'Expectations' http://ktep.org/post/famous-father-had-highest-expectations You would think, wouldn't you, that the man who created such heartrendingly sympathetic children as Oliver Twist, Pip, Tiny Tim and poor Little Nell would be a stupendous father. Well, the Charles Dickens who emerges from Robert Gottlieb's <em>Great Expectations, </em>a compulsively readable if occasionally repetitive account of what happened to the great writer's brood of seven sons and three daughters, is not so wonderful.<p>Daddy Dearest welcomed each new addition to his family with bemused delight — if a tendency to blame the rapid proliferation on his wife Catherine. Tue, 20 Nov 2012 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 5576 at http://ktep.org Famous Father Had Highest 'Expectations' Delicious Deceit Abounds In McEwan's 'Sweet Tooth' http://ktep.org/post/delicious-deceit-abounds-mcewans-sweet-tooth Ian McEwan's 15th book of fiction, <em>Sweet Tooth</em>, is a Tootsie Roll Pop of a literary confection — hard-boiled candy enrobing a chewy surprise at its core. Tue, 13 Nov 2012 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 5106 at http://ktep.org Delicious Deceit Abounds In McEwan's 'Sweet Tooth' 'Flight Behavior' Weds Issues To A Butterfly Narrative http://ktep.org/post/flight-behavior-weds-issues-butterfly-narrative Barbara Kingsolver's commitment to literature promoting social justice runs so deep that in 1998 she established the Bellwether Prize (now the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction) to encourage it.<p>In the wrong hands, fiction written to convey urgent social messages is as tedious as a political harangue. But done well, it can be both eye-opening and moving: think Charles Dickens on children and poverty in <em>Oliver Twist</em>; Upton Sinclair on the meat-processing industry in <em>The Jungle;</em> Toni Morrison on the tolls of slavery in <em>Beloved</em>; E.L. Tue, 06 Nov 2012 12:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 4590 at http://ktep.org 'Flight Behavior' Weds Issues To A Butterfly Narrative 'All Gone' Offers Disappointing Take On Hot Topic http://ktep.org/post/all-gone-offers-disappointing-take-hot-topic The best memoirs transcend the strictly personal. Tue, 25 Sep 2012 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 1869 at http://ktep.org 'All Gone' Offers Disappointing Take On Hot Topic How Christopher Hitchens Faced His Own 'Moratality' http://ktep.org/post/how-christopher-hitchens-faced-his-own-moratality When a consummately articulate, boundlessly bold journalist stricken with stage 4 esophageal cancer reports from the front lines about facing what he calls, among other things, "hello darkness my old friend," you sit up and pay attention. Mortality, by virtue of its ultimate unavoidability, raises questions about the very meaning of life, making it as challenging a subject as any tackled by Christopher Hitchens in his brilliant career. It is, in fact, one of <em>the</em> subjects, right up there with love, and you can count on Hitchens to eschew weak-kneed sentimentality. Wed, 05 Sep 2012 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 649 at http://ktep.org How Christopher Hitchens Faced His Own 'Moratality' Haves And Have-Nots In 'NW' London http://ktep.org/post/haves-and-have-nots-nw-london Some postal codes encapsulate a socioeconomic profile in tidy shorthand: 10021 for Manhattan's tony Upper East Side, NW6 and NW10 for London's racially mixed, resolutely ungentrified northwest quadrant. Thu, 30 Aug 2012 12:26:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 396 at http://ktep.org Haves And Have-Nots In 'NW' London 'Winter Journal': Paul Auster On Aging, Mortality http://ktep.org/post/winter-journal-paul-auster-aging-mortality "You think it will never happen to you," Paul Auster writes about aging and mortality in <em>Winter Journal, </em>penned during the winter of 2011, when he turned 64. Thirty years ago, Auster followed several volumes of poetry with <em>The Invention of Solitude</em>, an unconventional, profoundly literary meditation on life, death and memory triggered in part by the sudden death of his remote father and in part by the breakup of his first marriage to the short story writer Lydia Davis. Tue, 21 Aug 2012 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 315 at http://ktep.org 'Winter Journal': Paul Auster On Aging, Mortality Screwball Satire With A Warm Heart In 'Bernadette' http://ktep.org/post/screwball-satire-warm-heart-bernadette What happens when a talented, Type A, hyperachieving woman married to an even more successful man quits working? In former television writer Maria Semple's experience — which she's channeled into her first two novels — the mood swings, loss of bearings, and toxic dissatisfaction aren't pretty, though she plays them for laughs.<p>Semple's first novel, <em>This One Is Mine, </em>featured an at-loose-ends former television writer who risks her cushy life for a sexually mesmerizing, drug-addicted bass player. Tue, 14 Aug 2012 11:03:00 +0000 Heller McAlpin 253 at http://ktep.org Screwball Satire With A Warm Heart In 'Bernadette'