Last Night in Twisted River by John Irving
Random House, October 2009
Once again John Irving has fluently demonstrated his considerable literary merits and superb story-telling ability. Drawing on the lives of an unforgettable cast of characters, he has given us first an entertaining history of logging in the wilds of New Hampshire in the early 1950s, a subject that is to recur throughout the novel, and a remarkable description of the emergence of a writer. Combine these elements with his characters and the reader will immediately be drawn into another not-to-be-missed novel.
Angel Pope, a young Canadian from Toronto,
dies in a logging accident in the first paragraph. This death will affect and
haunt the central characters for the next 50 years, including Dominic
Baciagalupo, a 30-year old widower, and cook in Twisted River, a remote logging
camp. He is raising Daniel, his 12-year old son, just upriver from Dead Woman
Dam, the spot where Daniel's mother's drowned body was found. It is a world
inhabited by grotesques. Ketchum, who is in love/lust with Six-Pack Pam (her
limit when she drinks), and Injun Jane, who lives with the abusive Constable
Carl (who shoots first and is insanely jealous) but loves Dominic, both help in
raising Daniel. Daniel's burgeoning
sexuality and the sexual angst exhibited by these characters provide a
recurring theme throughout the book. It is the relationships among these five
adults that lead to the accident the last night in Twisted River. A 300-pound
woman is mistaken for a bear and an 8-inch frying pan figures in the accident.
That accident, the central conflict it
creates, and their solution will follow Dominic and Daniel from 1954 to 2005.
The story leaps forward in increments - 13, 16, 17, 1, and 4 years. In each
jump forward, Irving skillfully fills in the salient events of the intervening
years. In one paragraph, he can move us from the present into the past and back
to the present so seamlessly there is never a question of where the characters
are in time and the reader never feels a sense of disorientation. As Danny
grows up to be a published writer, his novels tell us his version of stories
heard earlier, stories that revolve around and evolve from that last night yet
still tinged with the logging accident that set events into motion. Dominic
says that "Daniel's fiction was both autobiographical and not autobiographical
at the same time."
There are elements of the
"autobiographical and not autobiographical" in this novel. In a
recent conversation with Canada AM's Seamus O'Regan at the Toronto
International Festival of Authors, he noted that this novel had haunted him for
20 years, and that many elements were lifted from his life. However, he said,
do not read this as autobiography. ""What I think is more revealing
is the things I write about that hasn't happened to me. Boy, do I write about
them a lot."
Last Night in Twisted River is, in Irving's words, an "old-fashioned, plot-driven novel.
Hawthorne and Melville are my ancestors... my models of the form." This
novel demonstrates that over a career that has spanned 40 years Irving still
has the ability to meet the challenge of his reputation as a brilliant story
teller. Since Setting Free the Bears in 1968, he has published 11
novels, won a National Book Award for The World According to Garp, been
inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame, and won the Oscar for Best
Adapted Screenplay for The Cider House Rules.
http://contemporarylit.about.com/od/fiction/fr/twisted-river.htm
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