The ice harp

Norman Lock, 1950-

Book - 2023

"Retired from public life, Ralph Waldo Emerson takes up arms to save a fugitive Black soldier from unjust arrest in the tenth of Lock's American Novels"--

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FICTION/Lock Norman
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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Bellevue Literary Press 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Norman Lock, 1950- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
239 pages ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781954276178
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Lock's latest in his luminous American Novels series shines a light on the Sage of Concord, Ralph Waldo Emerson, as he suffers from dementia. The story takes on added poignancy as Lock shares in his foreword that his own mother died during the late stages of dementia while Lock worked on the manuscript. The structure plays wonderfully to Lock's signature strengths, his facility with words and sheer love of language. The aged Emerson's speech and thoughts are littered with malapropisms, spoonerisms, and puns that are clever and often profound. Emerson has imaginary conversations with the spectral forms of Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, and John Brown, peppered with "witty circumlocutions," as he ambles around town, inadvertently causing mischief. Lock also inserts nursery rhymes, powerfully evoking the stages of life as Emerson's illness progresses. This polyphonic approach provides countless memorable turns of phrase, and it is the rare paragraph that does not inspire underlining as Lock explores memory, mortality, and the passage of time, infusing this elegiac ode with deeper meaning. Lock captures this masterfully by quoting Emerson himself, "As the Sage of Concord said regretfully and, at the same time, wonderingly, 'Strange that the kind heavens should keep us on earth after they have destroyed our connection with things'."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An aging Ralph Waldo Emerson grapples with an ethical dilemma. Over the last decade, the stylistic range and subtle connections on display in Lock's American Novels cycle have afforded many pleasures. This latest installment focuses on Ralph Waldo Emerson, opening two and a half years before his death. He's showing the effects of dementia--which, unsettlingly, include a moment in which he doesn't recognize a passage from one of his own works. Emerson also converses with other people, living and dead, with whom he crossed paths. "I hope Garrison doesn't take it into his head to visit me. His opinions are fiery, and I dread being scorched," he thinks at one point. In his introduction, Lock writes that this book "can be thought of as a play for voices"--and an early passage in which Emerson ponders the word spoon suggests, perhaps, a slight influence of Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape in the mix. Eventually, Emerson must try to focus on the present moment; he meets James Stokes, a Black soldier who deserted after defending himself from a racist attack and killing another soldier in self-defense. As in A Fugitive in Walden Woods (2017), Lock explores the gulf between some transcendentalists' idealism and their reticence to take a stronger moral stance on racism and slavery--and Emerson occasionally muses on Samuel Long, the protagonist of that earlier novel, strengthening the connection between the two books. There's a profound sadness here, as Emerson muses on his losses, noting that "our bereavements bring us no nearer to God." And his awareness of his own condition is heartbreaking to ponder: "Soon the universe inside me will slip out like a yolk from an eggshell." An elegiac, powerful book about a thinker's limitations. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.