This section contains 872 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: McCleese, Don. Review of Empire Falls, by Richard Russo. Book (July 2001): 63.
In the following review, McCleese compliments Russo's balancing of comedic and tragic elements in Empire Falls.
Writer Tom Wolfe once charged that “the American novel is dying, not of obsolescence, but of anorexia.” The remedy? “Novelists with the energy and the verve to approach America in the way her moviemakers do,” with “huge appetites and mighty, unslaked thirsts.” For a feast of social realism, the hungry reader might turn to Richard Russo's latest work, a multigenerational epic of rich detail, memorable character and indelible plot. This is the sort of big-theme novel that complainers maintain no one is writing any more, an ambitious throwback to an era when novelists more often looked outward than inward for inspirational nourishment.
In Empire Falls, which is set in a Maine town teetering toward oblivion, Russo introduces a cross section...
This section contains 872 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |