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Loading... The Lacuna: A Novelby Barbara Kingsolver
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I really, really tried but after about 50 pages I just found this book (shockingly!) to be dull and boring. Oh, Barbara! ( )I struggled with this book, but the payoff made it worthwhile. Having no interest in this slice of history (Kahlo, Rivera, Trotsky, Communism, etc) I decided to stop reading at about page 75. But, I found myself picking the book up just for the pleasure of reading a couple more pages of Kingsolver's words. Eventually I decided I'd read for the beauty of language, plot be damned. I'm glad I did. By the end, I'd fallen in love with Harrison (optimistic, hopeful, sarcastic, and introverted) and Violet (loyal, practical, moral, and self-contained). Kingsolver won me over with her lyrical language and gift of voice. And, I learned a little something about the horrors of the McCarthy era, too. Food for heart and mind - not a bad deal. 4 1/2 stars. Having enjoyed all the Kingsolver books that I have read, I was not disappointed in The Lacuna. A boy, Harrison Shepherd, is raised in both Mexico and the United States by a Mexican mother, a mostly unsuccessful gold digger and a lost soul. His U.S. American father is largely absent. The boy becomes a plaster mixer, a chef, and general errand boy for the artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahol. The novel is a lovely, lyrical mixture of fact and fiction, with real humans including Trotsky, Kahlo, and Rivera. Shepherd becomes embroiled in the communism/anti-communism paranoia of the post-WWII United States. The story never fails to entertain as well as educate, and the writing is beautiful. fiction, novel, Mexico, American, artists, Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, political leader, revolution, subversive activity I have not read all of Barbara Kingsolver's books but the ones I have read have all been amazing. The Lacuna is no exception. I enjoyed picking it up every night for my daily reading before bed these past couple weeks and it has been the perfect read for me here in Lajitas, TX down near Big Bend National Park. This was a book I enjoyed reading slowly, being sure to take it all in and not miss anything by trying to get it finished quickly. The Lacuna is a novel of collected journal entries and letters by Harrison Shepherd from the time he was a young teenager into adulthood. They recount his adventures through Mexico in the 30's and 40's and into his adult life in America. I felt like I was there experiencing his encounter with Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera and the life he led working for them in Mexico City. Harrison and everyone he meets throughout the book are so fleshed out and real that I kept forgetting that this was a novel and not a memoir. Beautiful prose, epic storytelling, and intriguing characters. I couldn't ask for anything more. Loved it. It has become a new favorite.
“The Lacuna” can be enjoyed sheerly for the music of its passages on nature, archaeology, food and friendship; or for its portraits of real and invented people; or for its harmonious choir of voices. But the fuller value of Kingsolver’s novel lies in its call to conscience and connection. A serious problem with The Lacuna is telegraphed in its striking title. "Lacuna" refers to a gap or something that's absent. The motif of the crucial missing piece runs throughout the novel, but the thing unintentionally missing here is an engaging main character. Our hero, Harrison Shepherd, is an accidental onlooker to history buffeted by other people's plans and passions. Kingsolver, at the top of her craft, builds pyramids of language and scenic highways through mountains of facts, while plotting a mostly tight course through the fictional premises that convey her writing’s social conscience. In this book, pacifism, social justice, and free expression are the standards she shoulders.
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