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Christine Reviews: Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann PDF Print E-mail
Written by Christine Bode

Book Review Title: Let The Great World Spin
Author: Colum McCann
Publisher: HarperCollins Released: 2009
Pages: 368
ISBN-10: 1554684830 ISBN-13: 978-1554684830

Five stars review from Christine Bode

Redemption, joy, wonder; that which is meaningful to the human heart. These are just some of the themes of the most brilliant book I've read in years: Let The Great World Spin by Colum McCann. This is a story that will stay with you for a very long time. As McCann writes in the Author's Note at the back of the book:

"Literature can remind us that not all life is already written down: there are still so many stories to be told."

let the Great world spin by Colum McCannLet The Great World Spin intertwines the stories of several remarkable and yet ordinary people's lives, how they intersect with each other over the passage of time, and how life can be changed in a matter of seconds by people who don't even know us. In it he is able to punctuate the fact that no matter how bad our heart is broken the world doesn't stop for our grief so it is essential to realize that love, joy and the journey is all there is. "Our background and circumstances may have influenced who we are but we are responsible for who we become."

We see the world through the eyes of Corrigan, an Irish priest who lives in the bowels of the burning Bronx surrounded by hookers and have-nots as he struggles with whether or not he will fail God if he breaks his vows and gives in to his love for a Guatemalan woman named Adelita. We meet Corrigan's brother Ciaran and later, his wife Lara, as well as the hookers that Corrigan tries to help in modest ways. There is Tillie Henderson, a 38-year-old hooker whose daughter Jazzlyn walks the streets in her footsteps, and Jazzlyn's two young daughters who may or may not have a future.

On the other side of the city, a group of mothers who are mourning the loss of their sons to the Vietnam War gather in a Park Avenue apartment to share their stories. We are particularly captivated by Claire and Gloria who are as unlikely to be friends as two people can be and yet they find peace with each other. Gloria was my favourite character because her strength and integrity is inspirational, but it is hard not to love something about every one of them.

"A big smile went between us. Something that we knew about each other, that we'd be friends now, there wasn't much could take it from us, we were on that road. I could lower her down into my life and she could probably survive it. And she could lower me into hers and I could rummage around. I reached across and held her hand. I had no fear now. I could taste a tincture of iron in my throat, like I had bitten my tongue and it had bled, but it was pleasing. The lights skittered by. I was reminded how, as a child, I used to drop flowers into large bottles of ink. The flowers would float on the surface for a moment and then the stem would get swamped, and then the petals, and they would bloom with dark."

The characters have a depth, honesty and beauty that come alive with such truth that it seems inconceivable that McCann created them from his imagination. All but one character, the tightrope walker, who was based on the true story of Philippe Petit, are works of fiction, but in some ways they are more real than many people I have known.

While it has been described as the "first great 9/11 novel", the New York City of 1974 that McCann describes with his magical, eloquent prose is as alive in every sense on the page as the pulse within my wrist. He also takes the readers with him back to Dublin, Ireland where we not only discover Corrigan's history, but McCann's as well.

Winner of the National Book Award as well as a plethora of stupendously positive and prestigious reviews, Let The Great World Spin should become a classic for the ages and have as much longevity and relevance as The Catcher In The Rye. I often buy novels by Irish authors and leave them on my shelves unread for years while I'm distracted by other books. I purchased two other works by McCann ages ago: Everything In This Country Mus (which was also an Oscar nominated Dramatic Short by McCann) and This Side of Brightness, but haven't read them. Now that I've fallen in love with this author they have moved into a new position near the top of my must read list.

If you read one book this year, let it be this one.

 

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