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Book Review: Succession by Herbert
Lobsenz
I have my finger in many different pies, and one of those pies
is an adult literacy program. Although I am only peripherally
involved. I am always on the lookout for suitable material.
Every book I read gets pigeonholed into one of three
categories, beginner, intermediate, and advanced. There is no
doubt in my mind that Succession belongs in the Advanced
group.
The writing style reminded me of a genre that was popular in
the late 60's and early 70's, and during that period many
authors fell for the lure. John LeCarre for example released
The Naive And Sentimental Lover, while critically acclaimed it
did not sell well, it was too complex in structure for many
readers.
Succession is complex in its structure, the language is simple
enough, but the concepts and constructs are involved. It is not
so much a flowing story, but rather a series of sometimes
disjointed vignettes that the reader must assimilate
themselves. That is not meant as a criticism, merely an
observation.
Herbert Lobsenz like his books is a complex subject. There are
few authors that win a coveted Harper Prize (1960) and then
decide to abandon writing in favor of the corporate world only
to return over 40 years later.
Let's talk about the book. Succession has at its core Jake
Garrison who some years prior had abandoned the business world
in favor of becoming a writer. Alas his genre, Civil War
'faction' does not seem to be garnering the acclaim and kudos
from the publishers that he thinks he deserves.
The turning point for Jake arrives when his father is taken
ill, and is obviously not long for this earth. With the elder
Garrison fading away in hospital Jake makes the discovery that
his father does not have the money to cover his bills. Jake
comes from honorable stock, and the his 'honorable' gene takes
him from his writing back into the murky world of business as a
way of covering the growing expenses.
His old acquaintance Carnusty is happy to loan the money to
Jake, but there are catches. Jake once again becomes embroiled
in industry, this time checking out a failing typewriter
company. But rather than operating on the up and up, Jake is
forced to go undercover in the guise of being the new editor of
the company newsletter.
Through very short vignettes author Herbert Lobsenz takes us on
a wild ride inside Jakes mind. His insecurity at home, his
insecurity with the relationship between his wife and Carnusty,
his thoughts about his father. All of these prey on Jake, the
doubts reaching ear splitting volume when his wife announces
that she is pregnant.
Can he resolve these issues?
Well only you can decide, and you can do that by buying your
copy from Amazon. The author also maintains a blog with his
recollections from the past at Old Time Writer.
(Originally published at Blogger News Network, and reprinted
with permission of the author, Simon
Barrett).
by Simon Barrett - 10th June 2008
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Simon Barrett is an adult educator in Calgary, Alberta. With
the 11 months a year of winter, he reads a lot of books! He is
also a contributing editor for http://www.bloggernews.net and maintains
a personal blog at http://zzsimonb.blogspot.com.
Reivew Source:
http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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