Book Review by Jack McDonough

A Book Review by Jack McDonough

I spent my entire working life writing and editing copy but I’ve never written fiction. For certain, I’ve never written a novel.

But I appreciate good writing and would like to help budding novelists, and even those already published, by sharing examples of remarkable phrase turning I found in one particular prize-winning work.

I’ve organized these examples into categories such as facial features, voice, reactions and so on. I begin with descriptions of faces because that’s what this author obviously spent much time perfecting.

Here are some:

“I leaned away from the desperation in her face, the quiet weak hunger.”

“Merriam looked at me and her face was an opened wound.”

“His mouth firmed into an uncompromising line.”

“The smile slipped off her face.”

“An edginess moved into her face, a stiffness that spoke of defiance.”

“(She) dropped beside me, face twisted with worry and wild regret.”

“My father’s face twitched with sudden worry.”

______

Is it any wonder that this author won a prize? The face didn’t merely communicate desperation, but desperation of a certain kind, one that spoke of “weak hunger.” Would mere “hunger” suffice here? Certainly not. And the edginess that, once having moved into her face, had a stiffness that “spoke of defiance.” I’m sure we’ve all observed that kind of stiffness but were never able to describe it so succinctly. Finally, the woman whose face was twisted with “wild regret.” How better to define regret than “wild,” you must ask yourself.

_________

Moving along, we see that laughter is no challenge for this writer.

Some examples:

“The old man laughed cruelly.”

“She laughed bitterly.”

“She laughed an unforgiving laugh.”

“A nervous laugh gushed out of him.”

Do these laughs require any comment? I think not. Except perhaps to note that the author has captured the skill of using adverbs and is unafraid of his work being labeled Tom Swiftyish.

__________

Smiles are no laughing matter with this writer, if I may use a bad pun here. Observe:

“He smiled the most hateful smile I’d ever seen.”

“She smiled thinly.”

“A despicable grin.”

“Her smile was tight.”

__________

Can you imagine how a smile could be “hateful?” No? Me neither. That’s why this author is so good. And the grin wasn’t pleasant or cheerful. Nor was it abject or base. No, it was, Ta Da: d-e-s-p-i-c-a-b-l-e.

____________

In the voice category we have interesting examples. To wit:

“Her voice was empty.”

“She spoke smoothly but I sensed great hesitation.”

“When she spoke it was with determined finality. Like she’d made some brutal decision.”

“I stripped my voice down and told them almost everything.”

_____

What more can be said about determined finality or a brutal decision. This leaves nothing to the imagination.

___________

Having saved some of the best for last, we have these:

“I stared as something loud and tribal began to thunder in my head.

“I felt the change in her, the sudden rise of an unyielding intellect.”

“The rage in him had died to a colorless implacability.”

“Something fragile spread in the void of my chest.”

“I felt something turn in my chest.”

“Something snapped in my chest. A strap loosened.”

“I turned violently away.”

“Cold filled me up. My mind went red.”

“He relaxed marginally.”

“He shook his head and a look of troubled perplexity deepened.”

“I pushed my feet up the sidewalk toward the jail. It rose

hard-edged and graceless, with windows as narrow as a woman’s

face.”

    ____________

            This novel, published by St. Martin’s in paperback in 2007, won The Edgar Award and carried the usual glowing reviews in its front pages. The Boston Globe said the author snares the reader “with evocative storytelling and lush prose.” The Sun Sentinel in Florida wrote that it “falls squarely in the league of the best of Southern novels.” On the cover, the Chicago Sun Times said, “Gripping. A must read.” The New York Sun, which folded in 2008, said, “If you value Harper Lee, James Lee Burke, Truman Capote . . .” it’s time to add this author to your bookshelves. (No wonder the paper folded.)

The author was John Hart and the book was titled “Down River.” The most amazing fact here is that this was not his first novel. This second work was so bad it could have been a parody. It was so bad that I simply couldn’t throw it away, strange as that sounds. This “review,” then, is a catharsis.

Lessons to ponder, or not:

  • The Edgar Award is meaningless.
  • Book jacket blurbs are meaningless. (You knew that.)
  • Getting published does not necessarily signify that the author has talent, regardless of what the Times, the Sun-Times or the Globe says.

2 Responses to Book Review by Jack McDonough

  1. David Daniel says:

    Brilliant takedown, Jack. You had me going… looking to be enlightened about good writing. Then I began to doubt your critical acuities. At last, I saw you were having us on.

    Back in the mid-1990s, one of my Lowell-based mysteries was “considered” for an Edgar Award. Reading your wonderful piece, I’m not sorry I didn’t win.

  2. Kelly A McDonough says:

    I still want to experience a sidewalk that rises, “hard-edged and graceless, with windows as narrow as a woman’s face.”

    I’m putting this quote on your book jacket: Book jacket blurbs are meaningless. -Jack McDonough