Your Price $6.50
(Used, Trade Paper)
More reviews from Powells.com
|
 |
The Names (Vintage Contemporaries)
by
Don DeLillo
The Best DeLillo You've Never Read
A review by Jill Owens
"The fear of sea and things that come from the sea is easily spoken. The
other fear is different, hard to name, the fear of things at one's back, the silent
inland presence."
Published a few years before White
Noise, The Names is a very different kind of novel. Much less directly
funny (although very witty, at times), somewhat darker, but just as skillful,
The Names seems to be one of Don DeLillo's most underread works, at least
by fans that I know. Simultaneously a suspenseful murder mystery, a meditation
on family and loss, and a poetic exploration of language itself, The Names
is an incredible book that will remind you of the range of possibilities the
novel can offer.
Something about setting a novel in modern Greece seems to do wonders for good
novelists. Perhaps the ancient ruins or the stark, revealing light, contrasted
with the modern culture and potent political history, makes for particularly
rich material. The Chicago Sun-Times compared this novel to John Fowles's
The Magus, and there's
some truth to that, in the mystery, the patterns and coincidences, and layers
of symbolism and meaning. The Names is a skillful, prescient book; its
exploration of terrorism and political instability connected with the search
for meaning in history and language seems particularly relevant today.
James Axton, the narrator, is a "perennial tourist" -- an American
political risk analyst working for multinational corporations primarily in the
Middle East, Turkey, and India, and living in Athens, Greece. His wife, Kathryn
(from whom he is separated), and son, Tap, are also in Greece, on an archeological
dig. James's days and nights are spent in the company of other ex-pat friends,
filled with conversation, wine, and the natural beauty of the country. Tap,
a rather extraordinary nine-year-old, is writing a novel based on the early
life of Owen, the chief scientist on the dig. The beginning of the book has
a semi-idyllic, in-between feel, even for characters who are already used to
being adrift in the world. Then one day a brutal murder occurs -- a feeble-minded
local man is bludgeoned to death with a hammer -- on the small island where
Kathryn is living, and then another, elsewhere, and everything begins to change.
DeLillo's language is precise and evocative, and wonderfully apt metaphors
abound throughout the novel. The dialogue (and there is a lot of dialogue, as
the characters often talk through the night) is amazing, as DeLillo's often
is: playful, ambiguous, intelligent discourse about language, religion, and
politics, which are all central to the ominous cult murders driving the book.
The Names is a book that makes you think and question deeply, even on
re-reading. You may not come to any firm conclusions, but you'll find yourself
examining the world more closely for hints, for other clues to the meaning and
order behind language and desire. (A caveat: I often like Vintage Contemporaries
cover art, but, unfortunately, this book's cover is truly awful. Ignore it,
please. The familiar adage applies well, in this case.)
Read more about this book
|