2021年11月13日 星期六

two pandemic novels( NYT)

 


Fiction

A New Novel by Louise Erdrich Haunted by Covid and George Floyd’s Death

Set in Minneapolis mostly during 2020, “The Sentence,” by the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, is a ghost story about America’s current traumas that also evokes those of our collective past.

By Malcolm Jones

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Fiction

Locked Down With Friends, Lovers and Rivals, in Gary Shteyngart’s New Novel

The characters in “Our Country Friends” retreat to a Hudson Valley estate, but the virus and the world are at their heels.

By Dana Spiotta

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Dear Reader,

Is there such a thing as the pandemic novel? Two new books suggest that the tumult of 2020 offered plenty of fodder. The Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and Minneapolis bookstore owner Louise Erdrich looks at what happens when the ghost of a bookstore’s most annoying customer haunts it over the course of the year in question. (Weren’t we all a little haunted that year?) Malcolm Jones reviews her novel “The Sentence.” And Gary Shteyngart’s “Our Country Friends” looks at a pandemic bubble of friends, and the romantic and platonic entanglements that develop as they live out a version of Chekhov on the Hudson. Our reviewer is Dana Spiotta, author most recently of the novel “Wayward.”

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