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"There is something exemplary to the sensation of near perfect lightness", confesses this resident alien, "of being in a place and not being there, which seems of course a chronic condition of my life but then, too, its everyday unction, the trouble finding a remedy but not quite a cure, so that the problem naturally proliferates until it has become you through and through. Such is the cast of my belonging, moulding to whatever is at hand.A Gesture Life presents this chronic condition in two different time frames. In one, delivered via flashback, Hata is a medical officer in Japan's Imperial Army. Posted to a tiny installation in rural Burma, he's ordered to oversee a fresh detachment of Korean "comfort women", i.e., victims of institutionalised gang rape. At first he maintains his professional distance, not to mention his erotic appetite: "It was the notion of what lay beneath the crumpled cotton of their poor clothes that shook me like an air-raid siren". But soon enough he's drawn into a relationship with one of the women, whose bloody and horrific denouement leaves a permanent mark on the "unblissed detachment" of his existence.
The present-tense, American half of the story revolves around Hata's life in Bedley Run, where he adopts, alienates and finally forms a shaky rapport with his daughter, Sunny. We might expect this sort of material to pale in comparison with his wartime trauma. But oddly enough Hata's suburban melancholia is much more compelling--and the gradual disclosure of his past, which is supposed to ratchet up the tension, seems too crude a mechanism for a writer of Lee's superlative talents. (His truest tutelary spirit, in fact, might be John Cheever, who gets an explicit nod at one point.) None of this is to dismiss A Gesture Life, whose dual narratives are written with a rare, unhurried elegance. And if Lee's splice job lacks the absolute adhesion we expect from a great work of art, he nonetheless pulls off a remarkable, moving feat: he puts us inside the skin of a man who, "if he could choose, might always go silent and unseen". --James Marcus
"There is something exemplary to the sensation of near perfect lightness", confesses this resident alien, "of being in a place and not being there, which seems of course a chronic condition of my life but then, too, its everyday unction, the trouble finding a remedy but not quite a cure, so that the problem naturally proliferates until it has become you through and through. Such is the cast of my belonging, moulding to whatever is at hand."
A Gesture Life presents this chronic condition in two different timeframes. In one, delivered via flashback, Hata is a medical officer in Japan's Imperial Army. Posted to a tiny installation in rural Burma, he's ordered to oversee a fresh detachment of Korean "comfort women"--i.e. victims of institutionalised gang rape. At first he maintains his professional distance, not to mention his erotic appetite: "It was the notion of what lay beneath the crumpled cotton of their poor clothes that shook me like an air-raid siren." But soon enough he's drawn into a relationship with one of the women, whose bloody and horrific denouement leaves a permanent mark on the "unblissed detachment" of his existence.
The present-tense, American half of the story revolves around Hata's life in Bedley Run, where he adopts, alienates and finally forms a shaky rapport with his daughter, Sunny. We might expect this sort of material to pale in comparison with his wartime trauma. But oddly enough, Hata's suburban melancholia is much more compelling--and the gradual disclosure of his past, which is supposed to ratchet up the tension, seems too crude a mechanism for a writer of Lee's superlative talents. (His truest tutelary spirit, in fact, might be John Cheever, who gets an explicit nod at one point.) None of this is to dismiss A Gesture Life, whose dual narratives are written with a rare, unhurried elegance. And if Lee's splice job lacks the absolute adhesion we expect from a great work of art, he nonetheless pulls off a remarkable, moving feat: He puts us inside the skin of a man who, "if he could choose, might always go silent and unseen." --James Marcus --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Life's what you make it.,
By
This review is from: A Gesture Life (Paperback)
The New Yorker likened this novel to those of Richard Ford and rightly so. Like Ford, Lee seemingly effortlessly creates the mid-American town Doc Hata has chosen to make his home since arriving in the USA. The pace of his retired lifestyle is beautifully rendered into print. As the novel begins we learn how he set up a successful business in the town and gradually became one of its respected citizens, something Hata is proud of. Despite this achievement, throughout the narrative there is an underlying sense of grief and regret. The reasons for this are revealed in a series of flashbacks, ranging in time from the recent past to when Hata was serving as a medic's assistant during World War Two. I really enjoyed reading this book. I found it evocative and thought provoking. This latter both in the historical facts it reveals, and in the questions it raises as to how we deal with the various problems that life is guaranteed to throw at us.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Thought-provoking,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Gesture Life (Hardcover)
'A Gesture Life' compares favorably with recent releases set in the WWII era. It is as fascinating as 'The Triumph and the Glory', every bit as insightful as 'The Emperor's General', yet written is a fresh style from a rare perspective. I recommend it highly.
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
disappointed,
By Lindymck (Falkirk, Scotland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Gesture Life (Paperback)
picked this one up because it was recommended to me after reading startling moon which was really interesting, which i have to say this one was. felt it was very slow and didnt really interest me until the main character started to think about his life during the war. there could have been so much more about this part of his life and how having sunny in his life because of it could have been more interesting.
well written, thought provoking but just didnt have it for me.
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