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Whites (1992)

Whites (1992)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.72 of 5 Votes: 1
Your rating
ISBN
0679738169 (ISBN13: 9780679738169)
Language
English
Publisher
vintage books

About book Whites (1992)

Finally I got around to this. Here's the conundrum: I love Norman Rush, but I hate short stories. I really hate them. I don't know why. So which one wins out, bc Norman Rush has only written three novels and i've already read all three. He's old. He many not publish anything else. So which would win, my loathing of short stories or my love for Rush?Well, obviously, my love. But. Even Norman Rush can't save the form. I mean, I'm giving the book three stars, b/c I did like it. But only in spite of all that's painful about it. I can't review this book properly, I really can't be trusted to be fair when it comes to the short story. It would be like asking someone who hates tomatoes to tell you which variety is best and why. So, I will just say that this is called Whites, because it's mostly about White Americans living in Africa, people who work for the American gov't. And now a few of my favorite quotes and you will see why Norman Rush is such a gem."Bruns was the opposite of flirtatious. . .He was very scrupulous when he was talking to you--it was nice. He never seemed to be giving you ratings on your secondary sex characteristics when he was talking to you, unlike everybody else. He kept his eyes on your face. As a person with large breasts I'm sensitized on this.""As to stamping, in secret I liked it because at each stroke I fancied I am stamping down God and his snares, to become safe." --I liked this quote, and it comes from the story called 'Thieving' --One fairly common thing to all humans are these superstitious beliefs, the appeasement of gods or God. Crazy things you think you have to do to keep bad things from happening to you. And the idea that God has it in for you, that the moment you mess up in some way, He's going to be there to slap you around a little. "Here's another good idea that came to me, that I actually put some time into. It occurred to me that it would be funny to get up a fake memo saying AID should hereafter stop talking about the poor and instead refer to them as the 'pre-rich.' It was just for the bulletin board. This has to do with some incredible new reporting and nomenclature guidelines we recently got from Washington. I actually started typing this thing up the next day, before I realized what I was doing and tore it up. Close call.""Money was going to be the problem. He was afraid. People would tell him to go into business. But the idea repelled him. Why was everything in the world for sale, exactly? In fact, he was with the government because selling things seemed repellent to him. The government gave things away.""He thought, It's easy to forget how remarkable it is that every member of the male race carries a pouch hung on the front of our body full of millions of living things swimming into each other. He cupped his naked scrotum to see if he could feel movement. He thought he could." I could put in lots more, but I'm too lazy, and you see what I mean about Rush.

Anyone who has worked or spent time in Africa will get these stories - will recognize the characters, black, white, African, British or American. There is nothing stereotypical in their presentations, because Rush has taken great care to properly flesh out each character with essential personal traits beyond their nationality or race.Having worked all over Africa for the US State Dept.,I could vividly recall the people depicted in their roles from Ambassador, DCM, the stiff upper-lipped Brit and the intensity of the local's gaze. I was completely transported- down to the sights and smells and power outages of Africa. An exciting and frightening continent from which we could learn a lot and could teach a few things, too. I now can't wait to pick up the copy of Mating, which has sat on my bookshelf for far too long.

Do You like book Whites (1992)?

Selected this book after hearing Norman Rush read Bruns at this year's Woodstock Writer's Festival. Past reviewers have said they do not like the abrupt endings to most of the stories, but I liked that visceral technique. This book gave me a sense of place and time that seemed very authentic even though I've never been to Africa. I had some trouble getting through Official Americans, but at the end I understood that I had been on the same meandering journey as the main character. Looking forward to reading more by this author.
—Susan

I started subscribing to the Paris Review this year. I know, kind of silly, since almost all of their stuff is online. But I like the short stories, often, and I like feeling the thickness of the pages when I read it outside. One thing I've picked up from the issues I've read is that there seem to be a lot of writers who are seen as touchstones in American fiction, most of whom are completely unfamiliar to me - what I have begun to call the MFA canon. It includes names like James Salter, Marilynne Robinson, John Williams, Lydia Davis, Grace Paley, Joy Williams, Lorrie Moore, Evan S. Connell, and at the top of the chain, the Tolstoy and Flaubert of the canon, John Cheever and Raymond Carver. The defining quality of this fiction is a very minimalist, introverted, calmness. It concerns itself with the domestic lives of mild-mannered people, who observe the world with a wry wit and defeated mien. Overly complex plots are rare. I get the sense that MFA students, focused on recreating this lapidary, elegant prose, aren't going anywhere near the experimental pyrotechnics of John Barth or Thomas Pynchon or D Foster Wallace (perhaps the latter, only through his short stories).Which isn't meant as a criticism at all. The stories that the Review prints - some indie writers, some stuff from the slush pile, whatever Zadie Smith is working on - are superb. Having never been in an MFA program, I'm more at the stage of learning and processing than critiquing. But there seems to be a cluster of influence here that I've only just begun discovering. (Can someone let me know if this is what that whole MFA vs NYC thing was about?Anyway, this collection of short stories is another book by a "writer's writer" that I'd place firmly in the canon. The first four stories are five-star brilliance. They, like the rest, concern American expats living in Botswana, mostly as aid workers or government contractors. Norman Rush lightly describes the lives of well-off, educated Westerners living in a society filled with danger and poverty and great kindness. Africa is filled with contradictions and causes people's values to veer wildly and their identities to change, like a psychic Bermuda Triangle. While most of the characters are the eponymous Whites, one story is narrated by a native BaTswana in broken English, and, amazingly, comes off as wonderfully sympathetic and real, without an ounce of condescension. Rush finds his characters frustrated and tired, overshadowed by an ever-present drought (mentioned roughly once every ten pages). But like the physical one, their spiritual drought refuses to break. Africa still eludes them, as it has eluded every writer seeking to get to the bottom of it. Rush wisely doesn't try that. His style is naturalist and authentic, and perfectly suited to his subject.
—Josh Friedlander

Hard to choose a rating for this, but the fact that this is a successful short story collection (not a term I'll really attempt to define) makes me more likely to overrated it than under.Probably the one thing that bothers me the most about the book is Norman Rush's face on the dust jacket. Sure, that's superficial. I realize that. But it's a very punch-able face. It's the face of a man who wants to be Ernest Hemingway. And then, on occasion, he writes like a man who wants to be Ernest Hemingway. Plus, his hair is dark, but his beard is white. That ain't right.I should probably say more. Maybe later.
—Brad

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