Book Review Club: Map of Lost Memories by @KimFay

It’s time for Book Review Club again; this time I’m reviewing Map of Lost Memories by Kim Fay, published by Ballantine Books, 2012, and an Edgar finalist for Best First Novel by an American Author.

Map of Lost Memories cover

The author describes her book as “both an adventure novel and a time capsule.” The time period is 1925 and the setting is Southeast Asia, specifically Shanghai, Saigon and Cambodia, and the subject is archeological discovery and illicit art dealing.

Publisher’s Description:

In 1925 the international treasure-hunting scene is a man’s world, and no one understands this better than Irene Blum, who is passed over for a coveted museum curatorship because she is a woman. Seeking to restore her reputation, she sets off from Seattle in search of a temple believed to house the lost history of Cambodia’s ancient Khmer civilization. But her quest to make the greatest archaeological discovery of the century soon becomes a quest for her family’s secrets. Embracing the colorful and corrupt world of colonial Asia in the early 1900s, The Map of Lost Memories takes readers into a forgotten era where nothing is as it seems. As Irene travels through Shanghai’s lawless back streets and Saigon’s opium-filled lanes, she joins forces with a Communist temple robber and an intriguing nightclub owner with a complicated past. What they bring to light deep within the humidity-soaked Cambodian jungle does more than change history. It ultimately solves the mysteries of their own lives.

The main character, Irene Blum, is a young woman from Seattle who grew up in a museum where her father was the night watchman surrounded by artifacts from Angkor Wat. She grows up obsessed with the ancient Khmer civilization. As an adult, she works for the museum and becomes expert at finding lost treasures and negotiating purchases. Though she has no formal training, she expects to be made head of the museum when the current curator retires. However, she quits when she is passed over for a man with formal education and training.

About this time, her mentor, an old friend of her father named Henry Simms, a private collector who is dying, tells Irene about a lost Khmer temple and asks her to go to Asia to find it. A successful expedition would make her name in the field, so she agrees to go, but Mr. Simms isn’t telling her everything she needs to know. He does tell her to seek out Simone Merlin, a young woman who grew up in at Angkor Wat in Cambodia and is familiar with the area and the archeology. But Simone is a committed communist, as is her abusive husband Roger. First Irene must get Simone away from her husband.

Angkor Wat

Entrance of Angkor Wat temple via bigstockphoto.com

This is a fabulous book, richly detailed, and is both an adventure story and a character study. Irene has to face situations she isn’t trained or prepared for, and do things she could never have imagined. How far will she go to feed her obsession? Will she and Simone be able to work together or will they be at cross purposes? What about the men in their lives? Simone’s husband and her former lover Louis, and Irene’s new love, Marc Rafferty, a club owner and adventurer. The action moves from Shangai to Saigon and then into the Cambodian jungle. I’d say more, but I don’t want to drop any spoilers. This is a journey each reader should take on her own.

It was obvious to me that the author had been in the area, just from the incredible description of the setting and the feel of the oppressive humidity. I waited until I’d finished to read the author’s comments on the Amazon page. It turns out her grandfather traveled in the area back in the 1930’s and told stories about Shanghai and the other places he’d seen. Like Irene, Ms. Fay grew up fascinated by Southeast Asia, and eventually lived in Vietnam for four years and visited Angkor Wat.

If you like Indiana Jones movies, you should enjoy this book. Recommended. (Dear FCC, I purchased the book from Amazon Kindle.)

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Linda

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@Barrie Summy

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Book Review Club: So Big by Edna Ferber #amreading

I knew Award Winners was going to be one of the topics for my readers group this year, so when Edna Ferber’s So Big was offered as a Kindle Daily Deal, I grabbed a copy of it for $1.99. The book won the Pulitzer Prize in 1924, ninety years ago, so it really qualifies as a Golden Oldie, too!

So Big ebook coverReview:

It has been a long time since I’ve read Edna Ferber, but I remember enjoying Cimarron when I was in high school and I always liked the movie version of Giant. I wasn’t sure what to expect from So Big, but based on the other two, I expected a big saga. What I found instead was a quiet character study.

The main characters of the book are Selina Peake DeJong and her son Dirk. Selina is the more interesting character, and most of the book is in her point of view. The daughter of a gambler, she spent her childhood traveling from place to place, living on the fringe of polite society. When times were good, they lived in nice hotels. When things weren’t so good, they stayed in working class boarding houses. The book opens when Selina is nineteen and living in a Chicago boarding house, but attending a finishing school where she has made friends with Julie Hempel, daughter of one of Chicago’s most successful butchers.

When Selina’s father is accidentally killed in a gambling house, exposing his occupation as a gambler to the entire city, Selina’s life changes. Now on her own, she needs a job. Julie’s father Aug finds her a job as a country school teacher in a rural area called High Prairie, home to a Dutch immigrant community of truck farmers. Her transition from city girl to farm wife is inevitable when she meets Pervus DeJong, a handsome but poor farmer.

I love the way Ferber adds the cadence of the Dutch accent to her dialogue. It reminded me of the Pennsylvania Dutch sayings I grew up with. For instance, about Pervus and a predatory widow who was chasing him: “Look how she makes! She asks him to eat Sunday dinner I bet you! See once how he makes with his head no.”

After his death, Selina again encounters the Hempels. Aug, who is now a rich meat packer, helps her to make the farm more successful and the Hempels play an important part in Dirk’s life, esp. Julie’s daughter Paula who loves Dirk but marries a rich man instead.

Penguin cover

Penguin cover

The title comes from Dirk’s boyhood nickname, which he only got rid of by punching anyone who called him So Big in school. When he was a toddler, Selina would look at him and ask, “How big is my little boy?” Then she’d hold her arms wide and say, “Sooooo big.” The expectation is that Dirk will grow up to do something amazing, and that is indeed what Selina expects. But Dirk is seduced by the good life and gives up his profession of architect to become a successful bond salesman, a profession that fails to impress his mother.

Ferber didn’t care for the title, and almost called the book Selina, but after reading it, I think it’s the perfect title. Toward the end, Selina again asks the now-grown Dirk, “how big is my son?” Dirk, who is now questioning his life choices, holds his fingers a short distance apart, and says, “So big.”

I have to say I found the ending abrupt and anti-climactic. Dirk appears to be reconsidering his choice of profession, but it ends with him in a melancholy mood, not having made any decision to stay the course or ditch everything for a new adventure. He has more than a bit of his grandfather’s charm and gambling instincts, but he’s also inherited his father’s conservatism–Pervus resisted Selina’s attempts to modernize the farm. After his death, she made a success of it–which is probably why Dirk gambles with other people’s money instead of his own.

Reading from the perspective of the 21st century, I found myself wondering what happened to Dirk and Selina after the 1929 crash. I figured Selina would have managed; she is a survivor. I’m not sure how well Dirk would have coped. But the book was published in 1924, so of course, Ferber had no idea the Great Depression would crash down on everyone in another five year’s time.

I did enjoy the book and found it a fast read. There’s an addendum at the back about how Ferber came to write the book and how she thought it would be a non-seller and suggested the publisher not even bother to publish it. Fortunately, they ignored her advice.

Another section talks about how she came to win the Pulitzer for this particular book. It involved having friends in high places, specifically as one of the judges on the panel. In the end, So Big won out over it’s main competitor, Balisand by Joseph Hergesheimer. There’s a description of that book and the near miss with the Pulitzer here.

Apparently, there was no runaway favorite in 1925, and even talk of not awarding a prize. Balisand had less enthusiastic proponents who thought it was better written, but White convinced the others that “the theme was thin and the main character unlikable”. (It’s about the politics of early America and the main character is an avid duelist. Somewhat modeled after Aaron Burr, I suspect.) But by the thirties, Hergesheimer’s style of writing was out of fashion and he passed into obscurity. Whether the Pulitzer would have made a difference, we’ll never know. I think Ferber’s book stands the test of time, as her theme of wealth alone not bringing fulfillment is always relevant. And the relative simplicity of her style makes it readable. So I think they made the right choice after all.

What have you been reading lately?

And as always, click on the icon below for more great reviews in the Barrie Summy Book Review Club.

Linda

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book review blogs

@Barrie Summy