DTH Omnibus Page 11 Thursday October 26, 1989 BOOKS Best Sellers Fiction 1 . Clear and Present Danger Tom Clancy 2. Pillars of the Earth KenFollett 3. California Gold John Jakes 4. Jimmy Stewart and His Poems Jimmy Stewart 5. Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All Allan Gurganus 6. The Lost Years J. M. Dillard 7. The Minotaur Stephen Coonts 8. The Joy Luck Club Amy Tan Nonfiction 1. All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten Robert Fulghum 2. Roseanne Roseanne Ban 3. I Was On Fire When I Lay Down On It Robert Fulghum 4. Among Schoolchildren Tracy Kidder 5. It's Always Something Gilda Radner 6. A Brief History of Time Stephen W. Hawking 7. I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise Erma Bombeck 8. Confessions of an S.O.B. AINeuharth New York Times The books we review are provided courtesy of the Bull's Head Bookshop, located in the Student Stores Laureate explores cultural decay The Bellarosa Connection by Saul Bellow Penguin Books $6.95 ooooo Ed Bonahue - AAji.ji.hA-j.i....jiiaiii..ji...K...ferA... J N: ear the beginning of World War II, Harry Fonstein es caped the Nazi pogroms in Poland and somehow reached Rome. While working as an interpreter for Mussolini's son-in-law, he was ar rested and held for deportation by the SS. His Italian jailer freed him unexpectedly, however, and con nected him with secret transporta tion to America. Their code word was "Billy Rose," or Bellarosa. This much is given at the outset of The Bellarosa Connection, a brief yet substantial examination of cul tural memory and American values. The short book, Saul Bellow's sec ond novella since More Die of Heart' break (1987), exemplifies in mini ature the writing style that has helped Bellow become one of the finest contemporary American novelists. Bellow received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1976. Harry Fonstein did make it to America, eventually marrying and becoming a highly successful inven tor and businessman. However, the story of Fonstein's liberation and immigration takes place before The Bellarosa Connection begins. The pres ent action of the novella lies with a nameless narrator, who is himself the child of immigrant Russian Jews and the founder of the Mnemosyne In stitute, a successful business for train ing "executives, politicians and members of the defense establish ment" in the correct and efficient use of memory. "Memory is life" is the thought that preoccupies this anonymous character as he recalls all his past dealings with the Fonsteins. In the narrator's memories and meditations, Bellow has found a way to layer his tory on top of the present, allowing the narrator (and the reader) to rec ognize and reflect on important dif ferences between two distinct worlds: the older world of traditional Euro pean Values, and the contemporary world of the American upper-middle class, in which traditional values seem to be subject to erosion and decay. Fonstein is part of the older world. He is a serious-minded Middle Euro pean refugee who, despite his finan cial success in America, maintains links with his past. "Fonstein, for all his Jermyn Street boots and Itali anate suits, was still the man who had buried his mother in Venice" during their flight from Poland. The narrator, on the other hand, serves as the epitome of "American pueril ity .. . nothing in his head but froth." The narrator has largely lost touch with his heritage, marrying a Protes tant woman "who knew everything there was to know about 18th-century furniture." The contrasting values of these two abstract worlds collide most obviously in Bellow's characterization of Billy Rose, the famous Jewish Broadway producer whose secret organization smuggled Fonstein out of Europe. Rose, as Bellow constructs him, "was as spattered as a Jackson Pol lock painting, and among the main trickles was his Jewishness . . . The God of his fathers still mattered." Despite his heritage, however, Rose is supremely American, a fast-talking entrepeneur of glitz. His most revealing trait is that he has no de sire to meet the persons he liberated, and actually tries to avoid them. When Fonstein's wife, Sorella, manages to force a meeting between herself and Rose, Rose attempts to explain why he refuses to meet Fon stein himself. "I have to keep down the number of relationships and contacts. What I did for you, take it and welcome, but spare me the rela tionship." To the degree that Fon stein retains and Rose discards their shared heritage, the two characters exist as polar opposites. Rose says, "Remember, forget what's the dif ference to me? . . . this is one of a trillion incidents in a life like mine. Why should I recollect it?' Significantly, Bellow portrays this avoidance of contact, this inability or hesitancy to let oneself be touched by others, as a trait acquired by Americans, "some kind of change in the descendants of immigrants in this country." He takes several opportu nities to associate both Rose and the narrator with things American, in cluding George Washington's Fare well Address and 20th century pop culture. Bellow does not inquire what it is about life in these United States that causes one to forget the past, and for some readers, the avoidance of this question may be a shortcom ing. Instead, he dwells on the changes time works on geography and pain fully observes the American meta morphosis of values, noting that holy days sacred to previous generations have become hollow intentions: "that's what the Passover phenome non is now it never comes to pass." Bellow points' out that Amer ica has no holy cities, but engenders ' a different sort of shrine, "New York for money, Washington for power or Las Vegas attracting people by the millions." Although the narrator and almost all of Bellarosa's characters are Jew ish, Bellow's discussion of cultural memory is fundamentally relevant to all readers, especially those of immi grant stock. The book also seems to ask if reconciliation is possible. Are the traditional values of immigrants always subject to American moral decay? "The Jews could survive eve rything Europe threw at them. I mean the lucky remnant. But now comes the next test America. Can they hold their ground, or will the U.S.A. be too much for them?" Restated, Bellow seems to ask if ethnic traditions and values can sur vive in American society without being significantly diluted. In this light, Fonstein assumes some kind of heroic status as a figure who main tains his cultural identity, who "could assimilate now without converting. You didn't have to choose between Jehovah and Jesus." Readers new to Bellow may occa sionally experience frustration with the Nobel laureate's prose. The Bel larosa narrator, following in a tradi tion of intellectual protagonists, take an extremely analytical view of human feelings and relationships; at times the emotional content of the work is buried under a mountain of analysis. Further, the meandering narrator refuses to reveal past events chrono logically; instead, he alternately jumps ahead, giving us hints of what is to come, and lags back in the past, fill ing in details omitted earlier. Using language that is rich in references to history and literature, ranging from Shakespeare quotations to modern slang, Bellow gives a sense not only of where American literature has been, but also of where it momentar ily rests, a combination entirely ap propriate for his new work. Cape Cod trio struggles through tourist season Summer People by Marge Piercy Summit Books $19.95 Mi eshed in a triangle of love, secrets and unconditional belonging, Willie, . Susan and Dinah are the exciting main characters in Marge Piercy's action-packed new novel Summer People. Through a delightful weaving of the annual summer visitors with the lives of these three unique individuals, Piercy creates a down-to-earth story spiked with just a bit of fantasy. The story explores the once-controversial relationship among Susan, Willie and Dinah, artists living together in a small Cape Cod beach community. The three go through eve rything together: love, heartbreak, loss, jeal ousy, change and the summer people. The three characters receive the seasonal migration of summer visitors to their town with three very different attitudes. Dinah re sents their presence, and she feels that they in trude on her otherwise constant world. Susan can't wait for summer to come, so she can once again mingle and mix with the high-class, high rolling vacationers. Willie is somewhere in the middle. He makes money from renovating their summer homes, but he could do without the people themselves. The plot of the novel revolves around the trio's interactions with the summer tourists and the changes each experiences after the va cationers leave. As she flips back and forth between the subject of each chapter, Piercy gives the reader a concentrated glimpse into the mind and life of Willie, Susan and Dinah. Chapters are told from one of the three's point of views, offering a frequent change in perspective and narra tive. The only drawback is the never-ending de scriptions. After Piercy elaborates on some thing for an entire page, the reader finds him self looking back, trying to remember just what it was she was describing. Take, for example, this quote: "Susan and Willie and Dinah were like family, like aunts or uncles who could fix what went wrong here, who knew what to do when you had friends looking for a summer rental or a baby-sitter or an au pair girl, when you required the roof repaired or the pump fixed" (Now exactly who did exactly what???). Although Summer People fits the form of a 400-page Harlequin Romance, it is an inter esting book. Piercy is successful in capturing the struggles of real people as they strive to reach personal satisfaction, happiness and meaning in life. Susanne George What the Ratings Mean O lame OO just O.K. OOO workable OOCO quite good OOOOO excellent s oi ca co e m D E CD U EL E ... m a m do m dd d m m r '