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SOURCE: Tallent, Elizabeth. “The Pleasure of His Company.” Los Angeles Times (9 June 1991): 3, 8.
In the following review of A Model World, Tallent regards Chabon's stories as inventive, insightful, and engaging.
Michael Chabon writes a prose so engaging—so rapid, graceful, allusive, and resourceful—that its reader can't help feeling flattered, singled out for brilliant attention, as when a witty friend brings every last ounce of vivacity to a conversation.
In the novel, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh, Chabon's first book, joi de vivre was half the story. The other half was a diligently plotted plot, variously enamored characters, a brooding gangster father and the young narrator's troubled decoding of his own sexuality. The novel included, as an anti-romantic element, the industrial swelter of summer Pittsburgh, yet it was romance, really, that carried the day.
It was a largely unclouded summer's day: The exhalations of factories never smelled toxic, fear of...
This section contains 1,131 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |