March 1, 2022: Vol. XC, No. 5

Page 12

ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING

Chen, Lisa Hsiao Norton (352 pp.) $26.95 | April 12, 2022 978-0-393-88112-7 Does time pass, or do we pass the time? Alice, a 30-something Taiwanese woman raised on the West Coast and now living in New York, works as a video editor but devotes much of her time to her “project.” That endeavor is an inchoate attempt to chronicle the life and work (projects!) of performance artist Tehching Hsieh, a reclusive and enigmatic figure Alice refers to as the Artist. Another, parallel life-project occupies Alice’s time and preoccupies her attention: the slow deterioration of her hard-drinking stepfather— referred to as the Father—into a state of dementia and disability a continent away from her. Chen’s gracious examination of

how a lifetime is spent follows Alice’s efforts to discover what happened to both men, who, it would seem, had little in common. In the case of the Artist, an early career of buzzed-about performance art pieces evolves into an attenuated disappearing act. The Father’s slow descent into unawareness portends a disappearance of another kind. Alice’s chronicle is laced through with references to artists and intellectuals and their pronouncements on the timeless issues faced by the men (and us all). Sartre and Sontag are among the thinkers with cameo roles, emphasizing the universality of life’s inevitable assaults on us and those we love. Alice’s relationships with others wax and wane over the course of the narrative—and her lifetime—in another illustration of the impermanence of the features of our lives. The human urge to fill time with projects of all sorts (movies, furniture building, writing, tying oneself to another person for a year!) is examined from all angles in Chen’s thoughtful and thought-filled meditation on time. Elegiac and revealing, Chen’s debut illuminates the clock in our hearts.

MARRYING THE KETCHUPS

Close, Jennifer Knopf (320 pp.) $27.00 | April 26, 2022 978-0-525-65887-0

A Chicago-area restaurant family navigates life-changing events and modern romantic problems. The Sullivans, the family at the center of Close’s amusing, engaging novel about life, death, and the restorative power of a grilled cheese sandwich, worry about their matriarch, Rose. They fear the loss of her husband might push Rose into depression. After all, the circumstances seem especially tragic: Bud died just before his beloved Cubs finally won the World Series. But other events of fall 2016 are proving enough to depress everyone, including Rose’s adult grandchildren. Jane, a stay-at-home mom who left the family’s diverse Oak Park neighborhood for tony Lake Forest, is starting to rebel against her privileged existence and is sure her husband is cheating on her. Her younger sister, Gretchen, is in her 30s but acting like a college kid, drinking too much and singing with a ’90s cover band in New York until a breakup sends her scurrying home. Their cousin Teddy wants to take over the family restaurant, but no one will listen to his ideas, nor can he rekindle his relationship with the boyfriend who dumped him, although they’re hooking up on the sly. Add to that the divisiveness of the presidential election, and the Sullivans find that they’re not equipped to handle change. Their conflicts are familiar, ordinary, the crises of everyday life, but the well-drawn characters always keep you interested in what happens next. Close navigates their entanglements and dissolutions with wry humor: She understands the difficulties and distractions of modern romance. As Jane, Gretchen, and Teddy struggle to find their footing, the close-knit Oak Park neighborhood is changing, too. But is that so terrible? Like marrying the 12

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