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Book Blurbs
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The Binding Chair
by Kathryn Harrison, '82
Random House, 2000; $24.95
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Best
known for The Kiss, a controversial memoir of her
affair with her father, Harrison again explores the
forbidden in this sprawling tale of damaged women. At the
center are Alice, a headstrong Jewish girl raised in
Shanghai, and the amoral May, a Chinese beauty with a nasty
past who marries Alice's uncle and becomes a kind of
opium-smoking Auntie Mame to the girl. Crippled since
childhood by an ancient binding ritual that turned each of
her feet into "a warm claw of flesh, luminous and slick and
folded in upon itself," May is bitter, secretive,
controlling -- and in constant pain. The lushly written and
morbidly erotic saga sweeps from Shanghai to Siberia to
London and back before coming to rest on the French Riviera,
where May and Alice part ways.
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The Immortal Game
by Mark Alan Coggins, '79, MS '88
Poltroon Press, 1999; $25
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Private
detective August Riordan spends much of this noir mystery
getting insulted, punched and shot at. Set in San Francisco
and Silicon Valley, the story revolves around the theft of a
computer chess program designed by software zillionaire
Edwin Bishop, an eccentric entrepreneur who lives in a
Woodside mansion with several paid female "companions." The
writing itself is a throwback to the hard-boiled machismo of
Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. And like their work,
it's laced with deadpan humor. "She had hoop earrings
trained hamsters could jump through," Coggins writes,
describing the receptionist at a North Beach S&M club.
Another character, in a moment of surprise, "stared at me
like I told him my goldfish played the glockenspiel." The
author knows his territory -- literary and geographic. He
worked for Silicon Valley start-ups, including Netscape, and
lives in San Francisco.
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Rescue
by Elizabeth Richards, '82
Pocket Books, 1999; $22
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Richards's
second novel (Every Day came out in 1997) focuses on
Paige Austin, a 40-year-old New Yorker who has a need to
nurture. Unable to have children of her own, Austin pours
her energy into the "littles," a group of four preschoolers
she takes care of each day. Her life is disrupted when her
troubled teenage stepson, Malachi McGowan, arrives after
being expelled from his Brooklyn prep school for drug use.
Starved for affection, Malachi responds to Paige's parenting
at first but eventually rebels, running away and then
staging a prank involving the "littles" that nearly leads to
tragedy. This is a story of the complexity of family
relationships and the journey from anger to love.
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Gravity,
Tess Gerritsen, '75 Pocket Books, 1999; $24.95
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The
Hot Zone meets Apollo 13 in the fourth medical
thriller from physician-turned-novelist Gerritsen. Dr. Emma
Watson, a NASA mission specialist, is called to the
International Space Station to replace a colleague whose
wife has just died. In his grief, the astronaut has
inadvertently released an elusive, mutating and gruesomely
fatal virus into the ship's lab -- and shortly after Emma's
arrival, it starts killing off the crew. The one man who can
help is Emma's estranged husband, Dr. Jack McCallum, but
he's been brooding ever since a kidney stone ruined his
chances for space travel. Jack and Emma eventually come
together to fight the virus in a twisting tale involving
meteorites, leopard frogs, internecine government disputes
and a malevolent house cat named Humphrey.
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