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Writing Empire Falls
Richard
Russo
One of the earliest
images I was visited by for Empire
Falls is also one of the first I put in the book: a very thin high school
girl walking along a street, weighed down by a backpack full of school books,
leaning forward, as if into a strong headwind. Both my daughters were still
in high school when I began the novel, and Kate, the younger, had already been
diagnosed with the beginnings of scoliosis (curvature of the spine) as a result
of walking home from school every day under a pack that weighed as much as she
did. The more I thought about it, this seemed an apt metaphor for the enormous
and often unnecessary weight we put on kids today, burdens that sometimes, no
surprise, leave them twisted or, more tragically, cause them to snap.
I also had, right
from the start, a minor character named Walt Comeau, "The Silver Fox," who shows
up in Chapter One, singing (a la Perry Como) "Don't Let the Stars Get in Your
Eyes." Walt is an aging stud who still imagines himself to be indispensable
to women, and he runs, appropriately I think, the town's one health club. Like
Billy Crystal's Fernando (of Saturday Night Live), Walt believes it's
better to look good than to feel good, and these days he's got a lot of company.
Narcissistic in the extreme, he cares only about surfaces and believes that
killer abs are necessary to one's emotional well-being.
What
I didn't understand at the time, or even much later, was how these early images
and characters would work together to dramatize what turned out to be one of
the novel's central themes. Both Tick Roby, the girl under the backpack, and
Walt Comeau, are products of our dubious culture, which steals the innocence
of children by forcing them to grow up before they're ready or able, even as
it infantalizes adults by encouraging them to chase after eternal youth. Either
of these cultural influences would be bad enough; together they are catastrophic.
The only way to be either a real kid or a real adult in America today is to
exist outside the culture, which seems determined that you'll be neither.
The good
news is that Empire Falls, Maine, does exist, at least in part, outside the
culture. Not completely, as the book's events suggest, but at least far enough
outside it to be interesting and worth caring about.
Empire
Falls
Look for Richard
Russo's books on BookSense.com
Read an excerpt
from Empire Falls
Richard
Russo's fifth novel, Empire Falls, is a Book
Sense 76 Pick (see below) and is on the Book Sense bestseller
list. His previous novels are Mohawk,
The
Risk Pool, Nobody’s
Fool and Straight
Man. He lives in coastal Maine with his wife and their two daughters.
A
May/June 2001 Book Sense 76 Pick
"Russo
draws us into the life of a man for whom everything seem settled but now is
suddenly quite unsettled. As events unfold, Russo's depiction of this small
town and those who are shaped by it is so lifelike you will find yourself
revisiting them long after you finish the book. Ribald, melancholy, and nearly
perfect; Russo is a master of the intricacies of everyday lives."
Jean Westcott, Olsson's Books & Records, Arlington, VA
Further
Reading
Connie Willis
Karen Joy Fowler
Tracy Chevalier
Homer Hickam
Tom Robbins
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