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The ClearingEditions
Review
Even if this excellent novel were not set in the swamps of Louisiana and its author’s nationality were not stated on the jacket, you could not mistake for an instant that it is American. Detractors might say that this is because of a childish moral structure but this would be unfair. The moral world is clear, but Gautreaux gets away with it because it is fully imagined. The mill is remote, dirty, violent and atmospheric. When an alligator pulls a worker into a flood, or a tooth from a sabotaged saw is removed from someone’s chest without anaesthetic, the reader squirms. The nastiness is unflinching. But the brothers too are portrayed with care. Randolph’s natural fastidiousness and Byron’s mental horrors are real enough, and there is a robust sense of them striving to rise to the demands of the situation. For what is also distinctively American is the novel’s sense of its own gravity. The alertness to good and evil is constant and you feel – almost – that language itself is a moral tool. Because the main characters are supple and convincing, the moral clarity, in the end, is persuasive rather than sententious. - review by Johnny de Falbe |
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John Sandoe [Books] Ltd |