Doctorow (1931–2015) reads his classic historical novel (first published in 1975) about the opening days of the 20th century with a dispassionate voice that doesn't stress, emphasize, or otherwise try to influence the listener. He lets the story speak for itself as he narrates as if he were reading a newspaper describing the intermingling of famous people with the ordinary, barely named fictional ones—Mother, Father, Brother, Tateh, etc. Brief intersections hint at unknown potential: Tateh sketching a portrait of Evelyn Nesbit while Freud watches from a car; Houdini having automobile trouble near Father's house; and learning that Father was to accompany Robert Peary to the North Pole. The new century was a time of wonder and change—cars, airplanes, high-risk escapes—and of culture clashes with the poor, blacks, and immigrants that result in injustice, violence, and death.
VERDICT The fascinating, ironic, and fanciful strands that Doctorow pulls from history and imagination are both humorous and horrific. Hearing the story in the author's own voice is the best way to read this book. Highly recommended.
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