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August Book Club
Monday, August 09, 2004
7:00 PM
Location:
Silver Diner
3200 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, VA 22201
Metro: Clarendon (Orange Line)
Phone: 703.812.8600
Silver Diner Website
Book for AUGUST: The Photograph
by Penelope Lively
From Publishers Weekly
Lively likes historians. Her most famous novel on this side of the
Atlantic, the Booker Prize-winning Moon Tiger, told the story of a
popular historian; her latest narrates the quest of a "landscape
historian" in search of what Proust called "lost time": the living
past of his dead wife. Glyn Peters, a famous British archeologist,
discovers a compromising photograph of his wife, Katherine Targett,
sealed in an envelope in a closet at home. Peters specializes in
excavating the long defunct gardens, buried fields and covered-over
roads of the British landscape. Reverting to professional habits, he
treats Kath's infidelity as a sort of archeological dig. The photo
depicts Kath and Nick Hammond, the husband of Kath's sister, Elaine,
surreptitiously holding hands on some outing, with Elaine and Mary
Packard, Kath's best friend, in the background. Glyn decides to
interview this cloud of witnesses, beginning with Elaine. Elaine is
a
successful, and somewhat cold, landscaper; Nick, her polar opposite,
is a man one degree away from being a Wodehouse dilettante.
Lively, who is never shy of letting us know her opinion of her
characters (like Trollope), makes her disapprobation of Nick plain.
Elaine, after learning of the affair, kicks Nick out. He takes
refuge with Polly, their daughter, in London, and goes rapidly
downhill. Glyn, meanwhile, has searched out Nick's ex-business
partner, Oliver Watson, who took the photograph, and Mary Packard.
Lively is
always a discerning, keenly intelligent writer. This, for instance,
is how she describes, in three irrevocable words, Elaine's
pregnancy: "She is pregnant: heavy, hampered, irritable."
Unfortunately, Kath, a demon-haunted beauty with little depth,
remains unconjurable. Her insubstantiality and the much-foreshadowed
nature of her death, not revealed until late in the novel, drains
this story of its full emotional impact.
For more information, email bookclub@dchoos.org
Click here to purchase or read a review of August's book...
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August Book Club Monday August 9, 2004
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