The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski
Review From John M. Formy-Duval
The Hamlet connection permeates this novel. There’s a prologue and five parts. There are a mother and father, a son "crippled" by an inability to speak rather than an inability to make a decision. An uncle appears, the father dies under mysterious circumstances, and the boy is haunted by an apparition which says, "Remember me."
In this, far and away the best debut novel of the year, David Wroblewski creates a beautifully imagined world filled with people who grapple with real issues. There is even a dog, Almondine, who shares her thoughts with us. Almondine fills a special role, while the other dogs function as a Greek chorus, giving us another, more dispassionate view of the story. Within the context of this excellent book, this seems to be perfectly normal. This may be fiction, but it has the feel and punch of Life.
In this, far and away the best debut novel of the year, David Wroblewski creates a beautifully imagined world filled with people who grapple with real issues. There is even a dog, Almondine, who shares her thoughts with us. Almondine fills a special role, while the other dogs function as a Greek chorus, giving us another, more dispassionate view of the story. Within the context of this excellent book, this seems to be perfectly normal. This may be fiction, but it has the feel and punch of Life.
Gar and Trudy appear to be living an idyllic life raising dogs, which are meant to be different. These dogs are anthropomorphized as Gar attempts to breed dogs that seem to demonstrate cognitive abilities beyond the norm. A son Edgar is born, and we soon learn that all is not as it appears to be. "The baby had no voice. It could not make a sound." Taught sign language early, Edgar grows strong and smart, surrounded by a supportive community and parents who love him. He learns about dogs: "A litter," Edgar’s father once told him, "is like an x-ray of its parents and its parents’ parents, but an x-ray that takes years to develop, and even then it’s faint. The more x-rays you have the better the picture." So it is with our emerging picture of Edgar. A snapshot here and there and eventually a complete picture emerges, one that is also dependent on his grandfather, father, mother, and what they taught him.
Relationships begin to change subtly when Edgar’s uncle Claude (!) arrives, fresh from being "inside" for a spell. There are things about him that Edgar does not understand. Then Gar dies, apparently of a heart attack. Edgar feels responsible, and, unable to tell the operator who or where he is, he is deeply conflicted. Gar’s death sets off a series of events that compound the tragedy.
While Edgar cannot speak to the world around him, humans and dogs, except through sign language, he speaks eloquently to us. His story is one of deep psychological insights told in a manner that grabs our attention and refuses to let go. The story pushes inexorably toward a logical and undeserved but appropriate conclusion. "Life was a swarm of accidents waiting in the treetops, descending upon any living thing that passed, ready to eat them alive….You clung to the happiest accidents–the rest you let float by."
Do not be put off by the length of The Story of Edgar Sawtelle. It is a grand saga and very readable. The language is poetic, the descriptions remarkable, never hackneyed. The plot is complicated, but it all fits together quite nicely. Rather than a summer read, it is the perfect book to read while one is curled up before the fireplace, the snow swirling outside, for it should be read in great chunks of time rather than snippets here and there for it deserves the reader’s complete attention.
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle has garnered well-deserved attention from all the major reviews, including a rave by Stephen King.
http://contemporarylit.about.com/od/fiction/fr/edgarSawtelle.htm
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