Book
Review: Richard Ford’s Let Me Be Frank
With You
When
a Pulitzer Prize and PEN/Faulkner – winning author, Richard Ford returns with a
new novel or rather four novellas set against the backdrop of Hurricane Sandy
featuring his career – making and famously irascible character, Frank Bascombe,
ominously titled Let Me Be Frank With You,
it begs the question of whether the said author has retained his form or is
merely flogging a dead cash cow. Ford, mercifully, sets such unseemly fears to
rest soon enough as becomes a writer of his calibre.
Frank
is retired, living in Haddam, NJ with his second wife and dealing with the
attendant worries of a man on the wrong side of his 60s such as grappling with
a problematic prostate, a certain condition called “ being fartational”, the
crisis of impending death and so on. In these linked novellas, Frank, who
thanks to happy happenstance was able to sit out Hurricane Sandy has to oblige
an old client and visit the ruins of his former beach house, suffer through
encounters with his ex – wife who has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s and lives
far too close for his comfort and an old acquaintance who has a bombshell to
deliver on his deathbed and in easily, what is the most poignant of the
novellas Frank is visited by an African – American lady who had spent her
childhood at the same house, and has returned to confront her horrifying past
that has long remained buried in the basement.
Plot
takes a backseat in the rambling narrative of this ageing gent who is in no
particular hurry to get anyplace but it is hardly a complaint given the richness
of the writing, the fizz and pop of dark humour and precious shards of crystal
– clear wisdom that are scattered liberally across Ford’s latest offering which
provokes outright laughter and epiphany – filled moments in equal measure.
Like
all truly memorable characters, Bascombe is far from perfect. There is a
definitive touch of the unrepentant racist in him which is painfully apparent
when he uses the ‘N’ word, refers to Obama’s “little black booty” even though
he has voted for him or compares his Pakistani doctor’s laugh to a chimp’s and
there are moments when his indifference brought on by a certain world weariness
that followed the death of his son, borders on cruel. He also panders to the
dirty old man stereotype when noting that the sliced fruit featured in his ex
wife’s paintings were reminiscent of female genitalia “cracked open and ready
for business”.
However
it is hardly possible to get too mad at him when his unerring observation
reveals an acuity that is often edifying. At the conclusion of his bittersweet
meeting with his ex – wife, the final line says it all, “Love isn’t a thing,
after all, but an endless series of endless acts.” Whether he is reassuring his
wife of his love for her from beneath a sink or dryly insisting “what I mostly want
to do is nothing I don’t want to do”, it is a hard task to remain impervious to
his brusque charm.
This review appeared in the New Indian Express, which you can check out here.
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