Sarah Crown
One Foot Out of the Grave
I am Homeless If This is Not My Home
By Lorrie Moore
Faber & Faber 208pp £16.99
It is fourteen years since Lorrie Moore’s last novel, A Gate at the Stairs, was published. In the intervening period, the world has shifted. A Gate at the Stairs rested squarely in Great American Novel territory: it was naturalistic and realistic, a state-of-the-nation tale. The zone in which I am Homeless If This is Not My Home is located feels, by contrast, spooky and unreliable, the novel’s night roads, hospices and burial grounds positioned in diametric opposition to the solid and familiar suburbs and campuses of A Gate at the Stairs. I am Homeless If This is Not My Home is a novel that deals in fantasy and the fantastic: hallucination, madness, ghosts, history and hysteria. Rather than aping American novels of the past, it peers into the 21st century and finds it to be a place of chaos, transgression and dissolving identities. It’s rich and vivid and crazy as hell. I loved every sentence.
None of this chaos is visible at first. Moore’s opening move is to construct a pair of stage sets, each of which appears initially to be firmly rooted in reality. Sometime after the American Civil War, the landlady of a boarding house on the ‘zig and zag of
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Under its longest-serving editor, Graydon Carter, Vanity Fair was that rare thing – a New York society magazine that published serious journalism.
@PeterPeteryork looks at what Carter got right.
Peter York - Deluxe Editions
Peter York: Deluxe Editions - When the Going Was Good: An Editor’s Adventures During the Last Golden Age of Magazines by Graydon Carter
literaryreview.co.uk
Henry James returned to America in 1904 with three objectives: to see his brother William, to deliver a series of lectures on Balzac, and to gather material for a pair of books about modern America.
Peter Rose follows James out west.
Peter Rose - The Restless Analyst
Peter Rose: The Restless Analyst - Henry James Comes Home: Rediscovering America in the Gilded Age by Peter Brooks...
literaryreview.co.uk
Vladimir Putin served his apprenticeship in the KGB toward the end of the Cold War, a period during which Western societies were infiltrated by so-called 'illegals'.
Piers Brendon examines how the culture of Soviet spycraft shaped his thinking.
Piers Brendon - Tinker, Tailor, Sleeper, Troll
Piers Brendon: Tinker, Tailor, Sleeper, Troll - The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West by Shaun Walker
literaryreview.co.uk