Netherland (Vintage Contemporaries)
Netherland (Vintage Contemporaries) book cover

Netherland (Vintage Contemporaries)

Paperback – May 7, 2009

Price
$15.76
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307388773
Dimensions
5.22 x 0.8 x 8 inches
Weight
10.2 ounces

Description

“Fascinating.... A wonderful book."xa0—President Obama, interviewed by Jon Meacham in Newsweek (May 25, 2009 issue) “Stunning . . . with echoes of The Great Gatsby , Fitzgerald's masterpiece . . . a resonant meditation on the American Dream.”xa0—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times “Exquisitely written. . . . A large fictional achievement, and one of the most remarkable post-colonial books I have ever read. . . . Netherland has a deep human wisdom.”xa0—James Wood, The New Yorker “I devoured it in three thirsty gulps, gulps that satisfied a craving I didn't know I had. . . . It has more life inside it than ten very good novels.”xa0—Dwight Garner, The New York Times Book Review “Elegant.... Always sensitive and intelligent, Netherland tells the fragmented story of a man in exile—from home, family and, most poignantly, from himself.” —Washington Post Book World “Suspenseful, artful, psychologically pitch-perfect, and a wonderful read.... Joseph O'Neill has managed to paint the most famous city in the world, and the most familiar concept in the world (love) in an entirely new way” — Jonathan Safran Foer author of Everything is Illuminated “Haunting.... O’Neill’s elegant prose makes for a striking read.” —Entertainment Weekly “A beautifully written meditation on despair, loss, and exile.” —USA Today “Remarkable.... Note-perfect.” —Vogue “Outstanding.... A coming-of-middle-age tale.” —Newsweek “O’Neill’s writing is unendingly beautiful.” —The Los Angeles Times “Brilliant.... A post–9/11 novel that takes us closer to understanding the emotional wreckage.” —GQ “Provocative, luminous.... A fine, darkly glowing nov el.”xa0—The Boston Globe "A dense, intelligent novel... O'Neill offers an outsider's view of New York bursting with wisdom, authenticity, and a sobering jolt of realism." —Publisher's Weekly (starred review) "O'Neill writes a prose of Banvillean grace and beauty, shimmering with truthfulness, as poised as it is unsettling. He is a master of the long sentence, of the half-missed moment, of the strange archaeology of the troubled marriage. Many have tried to write a great American novel. Joseph O'Neill has succeeded." — Joseph O'Connor , author of Star of the Sea "Somewhere between the towns of Saul Bellow and Ian McEwan, O'Neill has pitched his miraculous tent. Netherland is a novel about provisionality, marginality; its registers are many, one of the most potent being its extremely grown-up nostalgia. The dominant sense is of aftermath, things flying off under the impulse of an unwanted explosion, and the human voice calling everything back." — Sebastian Barry, author of A Long Long Way Joseph O’Neill was born in Cork, Ireland, in 1964 and grew up in Mozambique, South Africa, Iran, Turkey, and Holland. His previous works include the novels This Is the Life and The Breezes and the nonfiction book Blood-Dark Track , a family history centered on the mysterious imprisonment of both his grandfathers during World War II, which was a New York Times Notable Book. He writes regularly for The Atlantic Monthly . He lives with his family in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The afternoon before i left London for New York—Rachel had flown out six weeks previously—I was in my cubicle at work, boxing up my possessions, when a senior vice-president at the bank, an Englishman in his fifties, came to wish me well. I was surprised; he worked in another part of the building and in another department, and we were known to each other only by sight. Nevertheless, he asked me in detail about where I intended to live (“Watts? Which block on Watts?”) and reminisced for several minutes about his loft on Wooster Street and his outings to the “original” Dean & DeLuca. He was doing nothing to hide his envy.“We won’t be gone for very long,” I said, playing down my good fortune. That was, in fact, the plan, conceived by my wife: to drop in on New York City for a year or three and then come back.“You say that now,” he said. “But New York’s a very hard place to leave. And once you do leave . . .” The S.V.P., smiling, said, “I still miss it, and I left twelve years ago.”It was my turn to smile—in part out of embarrassment, because he’d spoken with an American openness. “Well, we’ll see,” I said.“Yes,” he said. “You will.”His sureness irritated me, though principally he was pitiable—like one of those Petersburgians of yesteryear whose duties have washed him up on the wrong side of the Urals.But it turns out he was right, in a way. Now that I, too, have left that city, I find it hard to rid myself of the feeling that life carries a taint of aftermath. This last-mentioned word, somebody once told me, refers literally to a second mowing of grass in the same season. You might say, if you’re the type prone to general observations, that New York City insists on memory’s repetitive mower—on the sort of purposeful postmortem that has the effect, so one is told and forlornly hopes, of cutting the grassy past to manageable proportions. For it keeps growing back, of course. None of this means that I wish I were back there now; and naturally I’d like to believe that my own retrospection is in some way more important than the old S.V.P.’s, which, when I was exposed to it, seemed to amount to not much more than a cheap longing. But there’s no such thing as a cheap longing, I’m tempted to conclude these days, not even if you’re sobbing over a cracked fingernail. Who knows what happened to that fellow over there? Who knows what lay behind his story about shopping for balsamic vinegar? He made it sound like an elixir, the poor bastard.At any rate, for the first two years or so of my return to England, I did my best to look away from New York—where, after all, I’d been unhappy for the first time in my life. I didn’t go back there in person, and I didn’t wonder very often about what had become of a man named Chuck Ramkissoon, who’d been a friend during my final East Coast summer and had since, in the way of these things, become a transitory figure. Then, one evening in the spring of this year, 2006, Rachel and I are at home, in Highbury. She is absorbed by a story in the newspaper. I have already read it. It concerns a group of tribespeople that has emerged from the Amazon forest in Colombia. They are reportedly tired of the hard jungle life, although it’s noted they still like nothing better than to eat monkey, grilled and then boiled. A disturbing photograph of a boy gnawing at a blackened little skull illustrates this fact. The tribespeople have no idea of the existence of a host country named Colombia, and no idea, more hazardously, of diseases like the common cold or influenza, against which they have no natural defenses.“Hello,” Rachel says, “your tribe has come to light.”I’m still smiling when I answer the ringing phone. A New York Time s reporter asks for Mr. van den Broek.The reporter says, “This is about Kham, ah, Khamraj Ramkissoon . . . ?”“Chuck,” I say, sitting down at the kitchen table. “It’s Chuck Ramkissoon.”She tells me that Chuck’s “remains” have been found in the Gowanus Canal. There were handcuffs around his wrists and evidently he was the victim of a murder.I don’t say anything. It seems to me this woman has told an obvious lie and that if I think about it long enough a rebuttal will come to me.Her voice says, “Did you know him well?” When I don’t answer, she says, “It says somewhere you were his business partner.”“That’s not accurate,” I say.“But you were in business together, right? That’s what my note says.”“No,” I say. “You’ve been misinformed. He was just a friend.”She says, “Oh—OK.” There is a tapping of a keyboard and a hiatus.“So—is there anything you can tell me about his milieu?”“His milieu?” I say, startled into correcting her mooing pronunciation.“Well, you know—who he hung out with, what kind of trouble he might have gotten himself into, any shady characters . . .” She adds with a faint laugh, “It is kind of unusual, what happened.”I realize that I’m upset, even angry.“Yes,” I finally say. “You have quite a story on your hands.”The next day a small piece runs in the Metro section. It has been established that Chuck Ramkissoon’s body lay in the water by the Home Depot building for over two years, among crabs and car tires and shopping carts, until a so-called urban diver made a “macabre discovery” while filming a school of striped bass. Over the next week there is a trickle of follow-up items, none of them informative. But apparently it is interesting to readers, and reassuring to certain traditionalists, that the Gowanus Canal can still turn up a murder victim. There’s death in the old girl yet, as one commentator wittily puts it.The night we receive the news, Rachel, in bed next to me, asks, “So who’s this man?” When I don’t immediately answer, she puts down her book.“Oh,” I say, “I’m sure I’ve told you about him. A cricket guy I used to know. A guy from Brooklyn.”She repeats after me, “Chuck Ramkissoon?”Her voice contains an amused note I don’t like. I roll away onto one shoulder and close my eyes. “Yes,” I say. “Chuck Ramkissoon.”Chuck and I met for the first time in August 2002. I was playing cricket at Randolph Walker Park, in Staten Island, and Chuck was present as one of the two independent umpires who gave their services in return for a fifty-dollar honorarium. The day was thick as a jelly, with a hot, glassy atmosphere and no wind, not even a breeze from the Kill of Kull, which flows less than two hundred yards from Walker Park and separates Staten Island from New Jersey. Far away, in the south, was the mumbling of thunder. It was the kind of barbarously sticky American afternoon that made me yearn for the shadows cast by scooting summer clouds in northern Europe, yearn even for those days when you play cricket wearing two sweaters under a cold sky patched here and there by a blue tatter—enough to make a sailor’s pants, as my mother used to say.By the standards I brought to it, Walker Park was a very poor place for cricket. The playing area was, and I am sure still is, half the size of a regulation cricket field. The outfield is uneven and always overgrown, even when cut (once, chasing a ball, I nearly tripped over a hidden and, to cricketers, ominous duck), and whereas proper cricket, as some might call it, is played on a grass wicket, the pitch at Walker Park is made of clay, not turf, and must be covered with coconut matting; moreover the clay is pale sandy baseball clay, not red cricket clay, and its bounce cannot be counted on to stay true for long; and to the extent that it is true, it lacks variety and complexity. (Wickets consisting of earth and grass are rich with possibility: only they can fully challenge and reward a bowler’s repertoire of cutters and spinners and bouncers and seamers, and only these, in turn, can bring out and fully test a batsman’s repertoire of defensive and attacking strokes, not to mention his mental powers.) There is another problem. Large trees—pin oaks, red oaks, sweetgums, and American linden trees—clutter the fringes of Walker Park. Any part of these trees, even the smallest hanging leaf, must be treated as part of the boundary, and this brings randomness into the game. Often a ball will roll between the tree trunks, and the fielder running after it will partially disappear, so that when he reemerges, ball in hand, a shouting match will start up about exactly what happened.By local standards, however, Walker Park is an attractive venue. Tennis courts said to be the oldest in the United States neighbor the cricket field, and the park itself is surrounded on all sides by Victorian houses with elaborately planted gardens. For as long as anyone can remember, the local residents have tolerated the occasional crash of a cricket ball, arriving like a gigantic meteoritic cranberry, into their flowering shrubbery. Staten Island Cricket Club was founded in 1872, and its teams have played on this little green every summer for over a hundred years. Walker Park was owned by the club until the 1920s. Nowadays the land and its clubhouse—a neo-Tudor brick structure dating back to the 1930s, its precursor having been destroyed by fire—are the property of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. In my time, a parks department employee, a phantom-like individual who was never seen, reportedly lived in the attic. The main room was rented out to a nursery school, and only the basement and the beaten-up locker room were routinely made available to cricketers. Nevertheless, no other New York cricket club enjoys such amenities or such a glorious history: Donald Bradman and Garry Sobers, the greatest cricketers of all time, have played at Walker Park. The old ground is also fortunate in its tranquillity. Other cricketing venues, places such as Idlewild Park and Marine Park and Monroe Cohen Ballfield, lie directly beneath the skyways to JFK. Elsewhere, for example Seaview Park (which of course has no view of a sea), in Canarsie, the setting is marred not only by screeching aircraft but also by the inexhaustible roar of the Belt Parkway, the loop of asphalt that separates much of south Brooklyn from salt water.What all these recreational areas have in common are rank outfields that largely undermine the art of batting, which is directed at hitting the ball along the ground with that elegant variety of strokes a skillful batsman will have spent years trying to master and preserve: the glance, the hook, the cut, the sweep, the cover drive, the pull, and all those other offspring of technique conceived to send the cricket ball rolling and rolling, as if by magic, to the far-off edge of the playing field. Play such orthodox shots in New York and the ball will more than likely halt in the tangled, weedy ground cover: grass as I understand it, a fragrant plant wondrously suited for athletic pastimes, flourishes with difficulty; and if something green and grasslike does grow, it is never cut down as cricket requires. Consequently, in breach of the first rule of batting, the batsman is forced to smash the ball into the air—to go deep, as it’s said, borrowing the baseball term; and batting is turned into a gamble. As a result, fielding is distorted, too, since the fielders are quickly removed from their infield positions—point, extra cover, midwicket, and the others—to distant stations on the boundary, where they listlessly linger. It’s as if baseball were a game about home runs rather than base hits, and its basemen were relocated to spots deep in the outfield. This degenerate version of the sport—bush cricket, as Chuck more than once dismissed it—inflicts an injury that is aesthetic as much as anything: the American adaptation is devoid of the beauty of cricket played on a lawn of appropriate dimensions, where the white-clad ring of infielders, swanning figures on the vast oval, again and again converge in unison toward the batsman and again and again scatter back to their starting points, a repetition of pulmonary rhythm, as if the field breathed through its luminous visitors. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BOOK REVIEW BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR • WINNER OF THE PEN/FAULKNER AWARD
  • • "
  • Netherland
  • tells the fragmented story of a man in exile—from home, family and, most poignantly, from himself.”
  • —Washington Post Book World
  • In a New York City made phantasmagorical by the events of 9/11, and left alone after his English wife and son return to London, Hans van den Broek stumbles upon the vibrant New York subculture of cricket, where he revisits his lost childhood and, thanks to a friendship with a charismatic and charming Trinidadian named Chuck Ramkissoon, begins to reconnect with his life and his adopted country. As the two men share their vastly different experiences of contemporary immigrant life in America, an unforgettable portrait emerges of an "other" New York populated by immigrants and strivers of every race and nationality.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(208)
★★★★
20%
(138)
★★★
15%
(104)
★★
7%
(48)
28%
(194)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Helpful If You're Studying for the SAT's...

I kept waiting for this pretentious and boring novel to pay off--somehow, somewhere. I didn't realize that the only pay off would be for high schoolers studying vocabulary for their SAT's. Nowhere else will you find so many obscure words so densely packed together.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not against reading an author with a strong vocabulary. However, I am not interested in reading an author who is more enamored with the sound of his own voice than in creating a compelling story with characters I care about.

Book Club Hell? You betchyah.
19 people found this helpful
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Good cure for insomnia

Honestly, Netherland is one of the worst books that I have ever read. My two major negatives about this "novel" were 1) total lack of character development, and 2) overly complicated syntax. These two elements combine to form a 260 page novel which accomplishes nothing. Basically, if you read this novel you will be treated to approx. 160 pages of ridiculous self-reflection of a main character who stands for nothing and hates most everything, 60 pages related to other characters in the book, and 40 pages of description on how to build and maintain a cricket field (which is actually the best part of the book).

Novels that focus on self-reflection usually include a character that actually HAS something to reflect upon, like a highly charged emotional event which shaped future events...this book is devoid of all emotion. Adding to that is the author's overly complicated syntax and word choice throughout the book. Sentences can be complicated as long as they add something significant to the novel. However, O'Neill writes each sentence to death, probably to mask the lack of character depth in the novel. I think he probably had to purchase a new thesaurus after writing this novel!

Overall, Netherland reads like an incredibly long version of one of those reading passages on the SAT exam...stay away and save your money!
14 people found this helpful
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Pure Crap

This is a story about a rich jerk with a bitch wife who hates America and Baseball and only thinks Cricket and London are just a little bit better. Its not about 911 and its not about ethnic diversity, Its actually not about anything. The book starts off with Hans complaining about his crap life and the book ends with Hans complaining about his crap life. His wife is a horrible human being, he has no friends, he is a sad depressed jerk who has no hobbies except playing cricket badly. Some dude gets killed, and Hans wonders why. He seemed more put off then sad. The mother of Hans dies and Hans seems to realize that maybe she will be missed, if it does not take much effort. Thats it. Thats the whole crap book. Reader beware for the slowest and most painstaking book to finish.
14 people found this helpful
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Rich white Dutchman tries to get his shallow spoiled wife back

Due to all the praise, I was ready to like this book until about 20% of the way through, I realized that there was just not much there. Certainly there is masterful control of the English language but this is not the only ingredient for a well-written book. It was a story of a stock analyst who was highly overpaid married to a highly overpaid corporate lawyer wife and together they are a perfect example of Caucasian privilege. Yet cricket opens cognitive and experiential doors for the Dutch husband and low and behold he discovers Brooklyn! He discovers Black people! It is interesting that his wife is suffering post-911 shock and feels threatened because the world as her shopping mall has changed. In this regard, O'Neill has a point, for Rachel, the wife, senses a threat to the vast world of excessive privilege that surrounds her. Yet Hans, her husband, journeys with his friend of color, Chuck, to the world of African and Caribbean immigrants, a group that does not have the post-911 morbidity but is just hustling for a living. There is much wrong with the novel including poorly developed characters. Rachel, Han's wife, is especially irritating as a character. Why in the world is wimpy Hans trying to reconnect with this self-centered, shallow, judgmental, cardboard character? The arc of their relationship is the primary armature on which this novel is hung and yet the appeal of Rachel to Hans remains a mystery that a more skillful writer would have developed with more care. I am amazed that the book got good reviews.
8 people found this helpful
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A Cricket Match in Times Square

Hey, stranger things have happened--lawn chairs on 44th street come to mind. The post 9/11 search for meaning in New York City has sparked many bizarre reactions, not the least of which is a maudlin surge of fictional output as chaotic and morbid as the event itself. Updike, McCuen, Labute and more have weighed in with mediocre literary stabs at this ultimate urban wound,and now Joseph O'Neill wants his shot at this unfortunate compulsion. In its sullen and self-important tone, "Netherland" stands as a prime exemplar of the futile struggle to get this thing down in writing, fitting snugly into the center of the canon.

One has high hopes for more than Gotham cliche at the outset of "Netherland". There's trace evidence of originality in the person of one character, Chuck Ramkisoon, the only entity in the work not burdened by the strangely dull weight of youth, wealth, international glamour, and all the concomitant solipsism that goes with it. Unfortunately Chuck exits stage left at the outset of the story, only to be resurrected in hindsight throughout. His mysterious murder, far from sparking the narrative out of its post-traumatic torpor, leaves it mired in the hackneyed world of New York's financially powerful young, a place all the more boring for its self-indulgent predictability.

Hans and Rachel are a prototype--international (she British, he Dutch), young (early to mid 30s), beautiful (of course) and hugely successful (she a corporate attorney, he a research analyst for M__, the identity of which becomes a more compelling mystery than Chuck's murder in the wake of last year's crash). But hey, after 9/11, it all just seems so, well, meaningless to them, not enough, not even to sustain their union for the sake of their small son. Evicted from their super-chic Tribeca loft, they check into the Chelsea Hotel to begin to sort through their life's priorities.

The Chelsea Hotel? Which one of these narcissists made that decision, this reader wanted to know? Even most tourists have heard about the more sordid goings on under its storied stonework. It's not exactly a family resort- the Embassy Suites Extended Stay facility would have been a much safer choice, and far more original. But hey, what's a mid-youth crisis among plutocrats without a return to Boho roots? It's a shame for them, though. They might not be in a Netherland, but a Netherworld, one of locked down cliche that they just can't escape.

Rachel drifts back to London with their son, leaving Hans to marinate in the company of his neighbors (a Turkish drag queen being the most memorable) and his ever less satisfying work for the i-bank. At what point, one wonders, was it ever satisfying?

Enter Chuck, who appears in Hans' life like a guardian angel to introduce him to something, anything, original. Cricket, for instance. Hans used to love the game. It doesn't have much life in the United States. Chuck, with his West Indian wisdom and exuberance, is making it one of his businesses to resurrect Cricket and install it in its rightful place as a sport of national consequence in the US.

And so the search for self through cricket begins. We know it ends badly for poor Chuck. But maddeningly, though we sift through his story throughout the book, the gist of things revolves almost entirely around Hans. We know almost as little about Chuck by the time the detectives arrive on the crime scene than we did when he first met with foul play on page two or three. It seems that Chuck, like everything else in this set piece, exists for Hans' diversion. One can't blame Hans for being so bored with himself, but neither can one really care about him, or Rachel, or anything about how their lives progress.

When Rachel predictably meets a new paramour in London, Hans is equally predictably deflated and rancorous. O'Neill peers into Hans' psyche through first person narrative, and here's a bit of what Hans is thinking when he confronts his rival (a cook, no less, oh the shame), for the first time: "'Oh yeah?' I wanted to say. 'Get back to me when you're grossing 10K a day, a__hole.'" Hey, Hans, go ahead and say it, don't hold back. Get in touch with your inner animal. It may be the only way for you to break out of the dangerous, suffocating urban zoo.
8 people found this helpful
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Saved only by Chuck Ramkissoon

The book critics love it. Barack Obama reportedly thinks it's wonderful. Amazon readers however mostly say it's rambling and boring, so what's happening and who's right ? The clue to these sharply divergent views can be found in the interview with Joseph O'Neill at the back of the UK edition of the book. He's more interested in letting the voice hold the narrative than rely on conventional plotting to tell the story.
In the interest of his lawyer wife Rachel's career development, equity analyst Hans van den Broek's relocates his family from London to New York but this proves shortlived when 911 happens, his wife freaks out and decides unilaterally their marriage has ended, then proceeds to yank herself and their son Jake back to London on the pretext that a trial separation is what they both need. The shaken and unhappy Hans stays on and wanders into a small community of mostly foreign born cricketers and in the process strikes up a curious friendship with a Gatsby like character from Trinidad named Chuck Ramkissoon who is ostensibly an entrepreneur - hey, what else can an outsider be ? - with a finger in every pie and with more than likely connections to the underworld. He dreams of building a cricket stadium one day and tries to interest Hans in the project. We know from early on that eventually Chuck's body is dredged up from the canal with both hands tied behind his back and if you're thinking this is going to be a murder mystery, then you'll be disappointed cos the cause of Chuck's death is never explained only alluded to in the most incidental way. Besides, it's hardly the point of the story.

So what is the point of the story ? It's about insiders and outsiders and how being an outsider creates space for individuals to build their own identities or lose themselves in, how 911 has shaken the social institution of marriage and the family, causing the loss of one's bearings, etc. Admittedly, Hans doesn't cut a very compelling figure - he comes across rather weak and hapless against his dreadful wife, one of the least likeable characters in modern fiction. She is bullying, selfish and self-righteous and you really wonder what poor Hans has done for her to leave him so suddenly. Sadly, after (we learn from Hans) her new boyfriend dumps her, she decides that she will have Hans back after all and they go on presumably to live happily ever after when Hans returns to London for good. God, what a loathsome woman and what a wimp of a man !

The story is saved only by the enigmatic Chuck - a man defined by his character's outlines and sketches, always standing half in the light and half in the shade. His grey qualities enliven the pages and keeps the story afloat.

O'Neill's writing oscillates between sheer poetry and overwritten prose. Amazon reviewers have rightly cited examples of excesses which tighter editing might have avoided. "Netherland" is hardly the masterpiece hailed by critics but it is certainly readable and enjoyable once you get what the author is trying to achieve. Not sure if the US edition carries the interview but if it does, read the interview first before starting on the novel.
7 people found this helpful
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A horrible read.

This book was like listening to a boring conversation in which trivial
events are explained with great detail and you can hardly wait for it
to be over. I literally forced myself to finish this pointless story.
Critics can be wrong and in this case, exceedingly wrong.
7 people found this helpful
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The Cricket Players of New York

Much of Joseph O'Neill's novel, "Netherland", involves the game of cricket as played by a diverse group of immigrants to New York City. The game becomes a way of bonding and of escaping anonymity and loneliness in an endless city. Cricket also is in the novel a metaphor for New York City and the United States with their promise of possibility and of respecting pluralism, while still making one nation out of many peoples. O'Neill's novel reminded me of a beautiful short poem by the American poet Irvin Feldman (b. 1928) called "The Handball Players of Brighton Beach." In his poem, Feldman describes how a group of Jewish-American immigrants or sons of immigrants get together every Sunday to play handball. Feldman captures the sagging bellies, the out-of-date clothing, of the aging participants in this ritual. His poem describes how the players are joined together by their memories and their hopes as they come together for moments of friendship and play in their harried, varied lives. The poem gives the scene a timeless, static feel.

The cricket metaphor does not work as well for O'Neill in his novel as the handball metaphor works for Feldman in his rare poem. O'Neill spends a great deal of time with the minutae of the game which confused me and which, I think, will confuse most American readers. O'Neill overdoes the game, its details, and its obscurity in the United States, as compared with much of the rest of the world. My eyes bleared over. Near the end of the book, a minor character pointedly observes of the cricket-promoting schemes of one of the main characters that Americans don't understand cricket. He thus undermines both the schemes of the character described in the novel and also, unfortunately, part of the novel itself.

The valuable qualities of the book include O'Neill's character descriptions and his portrayal of New York City as epitomizing the American dream. The three main characters in the novel are Hans, his wife Rachel, and Han's friend Chuck Ramkisoon, a native of Trinadad who proudly identifies himself as an American. Hans is a successful analyst of oil and gas stocks who was born in the Netherlands, worked for a large London investment house, and moved to New York City to follow his wife Rachel, a successful corporate lawyer. The couple are wealthy and have a small son, Jake. Hans and Rachel also are in the midst of an apparently lifeless, passionless marriage. Rachel returns to London without Hans following the events of September 11, 2001.

The story centers more for me on Hans and Chuck than on Hans and Rachel. O'Neill gives a picture of anomie and loss in urban America. The tie-in to September 11 seems to me secondary to this. With the loss of Rachel and Jake, Hans is rootless and alone and unhappy for, he claims, the first time in his life. His work no longer satisfies Hans and he wanders aimlessly through the streets, friendless. The novel offers good portraits of the old Chelsea Hotel and its eccentric residents, of the numbing mindlessness of applying for a driver's permit of the Department of Motor Vehicles, and of being alone and confused. Through a cricket game, Hans meets Chuck who has both American dreams and shady, violent business connections that are never fully explained in the story. The two become friends, but the relationship ultimately results in Hans's decision to return to England where he attempts a reconciliation with Rachel. Chuck comes to symbolize for Hans and for the reader the promise and the difficulty of the American dream.

The story is told in the first-person by Hans by means of flashbacks, memories, and frequent changes of scene. The novel chronologically begins neart the end with Hans settled again in his London life but with New York City in his heart. As events unfold, Hans recalls and describes earlier parts of his life, as a child in the Netherlands with his mother after his father's untimely death, in London where as a rising financial analyst he courts and marries Rachel, and in New York. Hans sees life through the eyes of memory and through his ideals. His lawyerly wife is far more practical and down-to-earth.

O'Neill expands upon his story of the City and of some of its diverse residents with reflections of September 11, the war in Iraq, former president George Bush, and the United States' diminished moral stature and role in the world. The writing comes close to polemics at times, but O'Neill succeeds, I think, in backing away from and limiting the polemic and in keeping his focus on his characters and on the role New York City comes to play for them. The role of cricket, as a metaphor for diversity and for cameraderie, is essential to the story but, as I suggested above, overdone. This book is one out of a large number of American novels that try to capture something of the American promise through a look at New York City and through describing the City's eternal fascination. It is a good book and worth reading.

Robin Friedman
6 people found this helpful
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BUMMER

Much too complicated to enjoy. I don't understand why this book received such high praise! What could have been said in a few simple words, is strung out with nothing added to the statement. My advice is, don't waste your time.
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Really?

This book seems to be trying to tell a story similar to that of the Great Gatsby. Unfortunately, it falls flat. Nice try, O'Neill. I read this whole book and felt that it could have been executed so much better. Hans, the main character felt flat. He spends pages and pages talking about cricket, and it's not all that interesting. Rather than spend time with Chuck, whom Hans is apparently OBSESSED with, he spends time on other things.

Another thing that bothered me was there was never anything new revealed at the end. The only hook keeping me from putting the book down was that Chuck was dead and as a reader, I'd find out how he died. I was sorely disappointed when the ending was simply, "He's dead". To which, my response was, "What a dumb ending."

It could have been so much better than it was, had the writer simply spent more time in weaving everything together in a much more holistic manner.

I'd recommend the Great Gatsby over this book, and that's saying something, because I wasn't a fan of Fitzgerald's book either.
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