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Reunion by Alan Lightman
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Reunion

by Alan Lightman

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Boring and slight. Guy goes to college reunion and re-imagines his affair with a ballerina. ( )
  bobbieharv | Aug 5, 2007 |
Showing 2 of 2
What makes this book a hefty cut above most is the accurate - occasionally emotionally brutal - writing, and the honesty with which Lightman/Charles approaches his task. This could have been mawkish in other hands, but Lightman's touch is as his name would suggest.
 
This nostalgia-fest is soggily sentimental but its sharp, elegant style is some compensation.
added by stephmo | editThe Telegraph, Jessica Mann (Aug 25, 2003)
 
Nevertheless, Lightman's lyrical meditation on aging and nostalgia may hit home for just about any reader on the downhill side of 40. Like most good books, "Reunion," too, is a microcosm, a scale model of the world we know.
 
Alan Lightman's elegant new novel, spare, economical and charged with meaning, is a seasonal reminder that special effects can be luminously achieved without pyrotechnics.
 
For a while, there’s much to admire, like the satiric set piece about academic pettiness that introduces Galloway, and the allegorical aside about an amorous (and fictional) 19th-century astronomer named Ulrich Schmeken. But the cycles of passion and fear of connecting that Charles and Juliana go through are like an emotional Möbius strip - there’s far too much repetition here for a novel so short - and after a while you start to feel you’re trapped in the mind of a slow learner.
 
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Alan Lightman

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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 037542167X, Hardcover)

The New York Times has called Alan Lightman “highly original and imaginative.” Each of his novels is a new exploration of that imagination, utterly unlike the others. Einstein’s Dreams, an international best-seller, was a whimsical and provocative tone poem about time. The Diagnosis, hailed by the Washington Post as a “major accomplishment” and a finalist for the National Book Award, was a disturbing examination of our obsession with speed, information, and money, and the resulting poverty of our spiritual lives. Lightman’s new novel, Reunion, is a delicate and haunting story of how we shape our identity through memory.

Charles is a middle-aged professor at a minor liberal-arts college, a once promising poet, admiring of passion but without passion himself. Without knowing why, he decides to attend his thirtieth college reunion. And there, he magically witnesses a replay of his senior year.

Drawn back into his memories, Charles watches his tender and romantic twenty-two-year-old self embark on an all-consuming love affair with a beautiful dancer. As the two young people struggle to find themselves amidst the social and political chaos of the late 1960s, the older Charles recalls contradictory versions of his past, ultimately confronting for the second time a series of devastating events that would forever change his life.
Written with crystalline prose, at once precise and mysterious, Reunion explores the pain of self-examination, the clay-like nature of memory, and the impossible hopefulness of youth.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)

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