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Olive with her keen eye for catching glimpses of light in phenomenal settings with her camera, and her obviously very relentless effort to live with these folks and document their spirits, has got to stand out as an American best-work The black and white photography is moving to the heart. She qualifies her perspective in the forward to the book, sharing a moment to lead the reader to look and listen to only one's unbiased emotions.
Carolyn Chute is, as always, bold and cutting to the point. She is poetically harmonizing with words and the photography, bringing an explanation to a perspective from deep within the soul--that place sometimes ignored by the demands of our fast-paced material world.
And the people in the book, there just some of the best folks you'd ever want to know. Why? I've not only read the book, I know them. They're real; and UP RIVER proves that low-income people are to be respected for their place in the spectrum of human experience.
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There is a poem by Khalil Gibran about children, that goes something like: "They come through you, but they are not yours". Ms. Chute should have realized that this could also be applied to novels. She could have saved herself the trouble of inserting some commentary in the "new and improved" finished version. I would have given the book more stars if Ms. Chute had refrained from telling me how wrong I was in my reading of the novel. My consolation is that I was not alone in my mistakes. Apparently, lots of people have approached Ms. Chute with the same errors I have made. These misunderstandings have incensed Ms. Chute so much that she's been compelled to clarify her meaning for us all.
Too bad of a wasted time, because of course I like my reading of the book much better. This is the beauty of literature, this is what makes a book unique for each one. If someone else were doing the reading for us, it wouldn't be as much fun.
So, my advice is to pick up a copy of the "unfinished" version instead, and save yourself the nagging postscript.
All the finest art creates a world of it's own. In the best art that world is a completely new creation, a singular vision and transformation of and by the artist. That world pulls you in, as a spiral, sometimes against your will, because of it's strangness to you, but if you're lucky the transformation that was the artist's becomes your transformation also. That is the "miracle" of great art, a miracle second only to life itself and that is what Chute has acomplished here. When other books of the late 20th century have faded away, this book will remain.
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Depressing story, strange characters, and not what I thought it would be. I struggled to get through it.
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Ms. Chute's prose is tense and clear although she has a tendency to use words like "orangey" a little too often. She's particularly good at describing wounds and Robert Drummond's painful shoulder wound is a throbbing reminder of his discomfort. But the rest of his hiding-out time certainly is pleasant and there's seduction at play here too, and not just on a physical level. He's portrayed as a strong and sympathetic character and we hear his philosophy of life over and over again. It's shown in bitter contrast to the life of the two upper class women taking care of him. For example, when he tells them his wife had to go out and get a job, the senator's daughter, who just happens to be a professor of women's studies, makes a comment about the need for women to pursue careers and get out of the house. Then she asks what kind of job his wife got. Robert's answer is simple - "McDonalds". There are constant references like that illustrating yuppie naivety about what it means to be poor in America.
I read this novel quickly as the story moved along well, but I just couldn't get into the characters. It seemed unlikely that the two women would become so enamored with this man even though he comes across as attractive and macho. All the people are stereotypes, created by Ms. Chute to forward her own political philosophy. In a way this is refreshing because it is a philosophy not often seen in mainstream fiction. But I never really understood why Robert Drummond's frustration with his poverty and anger about corporate greed would make him want to take the life of another human being. I wonder though, if I, too, am just being naïve.
Those who might want a glimpse into the thought processes of a militiaman might find this book interesting. However, it is only a glimpse and doesn't go deep enough. And the story, while well crafted, is basically superficial.
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