I
am so disappointed, my critical faculties so disarrayed by The
Tale Teller’s
bad writing,
I must warn you any gaps you might discover in this review’s syntax
might well be the fault of my falling asleep during the writing. I’m
not trying to excuse such
lapses, but merely to note that in
my
hurry
to
complete this exercise for the
week’s Friday’s Forgotten Books blogging feature readability
may suffer a tad in the struggle
with
fatigue
my
lips
incurred death
marching
thru
the 320 tedious pages of Tale
Teller’s
leviathan swamp of redundancies, non-sequiturs, blizzard of
characters, infantile dialogue, detail overkill, and virtually zero
suspense. Truth be told I might just cave at some point, and file
whatever I’ve written without so much as a glance for errors of any
kind or attempting a snappy ending (please don’t judge me for
moving my lips when I read, you know
I have excuses).
So
why? Why did I slog thru the damned thing and not hurl the book
against a wall? Well, I didn’t have the book. OK, so why didn’t I
cruelly delete it from my Kindle archive? Because books in Kindle
archives cannot be deleted, so far as I know. I’ve tried, and the
covers just blink as if silently laughing at me. So why didn’t I
just stop reading, return it to the archive, and read something else?
Good question. Not sure how to answer it. I’m stubborn--part
Norwegian—I started it, and had to finish it (I almost wrote to
see what came next,
but the narrative fell far short of being so compelling). Maybe
there was a glimmer of hope if I kept reading I’d of a sudden burst
from the swamp into a musical meadow, and my heart would begin
whirling and leaping and urging my lips to cease flapping sullenly
and dance into song. Maybe that was the ticket. More likely it was my
Hillerman jones, my addiction to Tony Hillerman’s Navajo Tribal
Police series and its memorable characters and engaging plots and
just enough well-placed Navajo lore and descriptive scenic beauty to
pull me into his world and leave me with enough of its taste and
lyrical ambience to draw me back for more and more. And then he died
in 2008 and his daughter Anne picked up the legacy and kept it alive,
extending the series, with the same principal characters—Lt. Joe
Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee—and adding several others, including
Chee’s bride, Officer Bernadette Manuelita. I was less than
ecstatic, but I read her first effort, Spider
Woman’s Daughter,
and found it so un-enchanting I’d forgotten I read it when I
started re-reading it for last week’s FFB.
The
re-read was un-enchanting, too, but I decided to give Anne Hillerman
another chance. She’d written four more, so I picked Tale
Teller,
the most recent, figuring her craft must have improved since Spider
Woman.
I was encouraged by professional reviewers, one noting in the Library
Journal
that her writing grew “stronger
with every new installment in the series.”
It would have behooved me to read some of the Amazon “customer
reviews,” as well, especially the pans, some of which indicated
Tale
Teller
was the worst book they had ever tried to read. Alas, I read these
comments after the fact, and found most of them expressed my feelings
precisely. Altho I wouldn’t go so far as to say Tale
Teller
is the worst I’ve read, it is, sadly, an unmitigated stinker.
Boiling
Anne Hillerman’s problem down the best I can, I would say she
suffered from notebook-dumping syndrome. Writers in the newspaper
business rushing toward deadline, lacking either the energy or skill,
or both, to craft readable narrative from their notes have been known
to simply dump everything they’ve gathered for the story onto the
page. This includes the newsworthy stuff as well as all of the
smidgeons, detritus, and extraneous crap they’ve scribbled down.
This puts the burden on editors to shape this raw material into a
story.
Anne
Hillerman gives us more than we could ever wish to know about road
numbers and conditions--The
hogback, the road’s most interesting geologic feature, sat a few
miles west of Farmington’s sprawl. She took US 64 across the bridge
over the La Plata River and it became Main Street. Traffic was light,
typical for a Sunday morning--geographical
landmarks and traditions, weather conditions and implications—both
historical and present—and...o, lort, I’m getting sleepy again…
Whew! How long was I out? Anyway, even the characters dump their
notebooks whenever they’re conversing. Remember the old Dragnet
trope, when Sgt. Joe Friday would be questioning a witness or suspect
for “just the facts,” and the dumb slobs would start telling
Friday everything from the time he or she kicked his or her slats out
of his or her crib up to the present including non sequiturs about
uncles and aunts and cousins and neighbors and their cats and turtles
and...holy Christmas, even on the show it got tedious even tho it
usually made us all laff. Time was more forgiving back then. And we
knew the language. Tale
Teller
has so many Navajo expressions, with their plethora of
accent marks and pronunciation squiggles my lips damned near got
charley horsed moving along with the ink.
What?
You think my example of tedious unnecessary description above isn’t
so bad? Maybe it’s not. Maybe it’s just a wee sample. Not enuf
for a skeptic like you. Want a better example? I have one here? Just
for you? You might be sorry you wished for it, but that happens in
life. No? Anyway, take a deep breath. If you move your lips like I do
you’ll want to spit out or swallow whatever you have there. You
might try reading this real fast. Maybe I’ve missed some poetry in
the cadences or something. Anyway, you asked for it. Here goes:
Interstate
40, the quickest way to Winslow, drew an abundance of truck traffic
and, in the summer, a bevy of tourists in sticker-covered RVs. Unlike
the orange barrels and shoulder repair work he had encountered on his
way west, the two eastbound lanes lay clear of construction. They
left ponderosa pine country for red rocks, piñon and juniper trees,
and then flatter, emptier landscape. As many times as he had driven
this route, Leaphorn never tired of it. The vast sky where he’d
seen double rainbows and clouds bigger than skyscrapers made whatever
problem he puzzled over seem insignificant.
...zzzzzZZZZZT!!!
Uh...oh. Sorry. I was dreaming of giving you an idea of the plot, but
now that I’m awake I can’t remember what I’d planned to say.
How sad. And it really is time for a serious nap. I can tell you
this, tho, what the title means: All Navajo weavings could
be described as Tale Tellers. Each uniquely reflected its creator and
the time of its creation.
And
how might this fit into one of the several disparate plots in The
Tale Teller? Well...frankly I can’t rightly recall. I would
advise anyone who’s read this far and who might be chomping at the
bit for a little something about one or more of the hodgepodge of plots
to scroll up to the hyperlinked The
Tale Teller (I just now hyperlinked it
again, for you!), which will take you to the book’s Amazon
page, where you can read the publisher’s summary. And while you’re
at it you might wish also to read some of the “customer reviews,”
to see how right I am with this one.
Snappy ending? Who in hell do
you think I am, Norman Mailer?
I am assuming she is Tony's kid. Is that the sole reason for her publications, I wonder. Is that enough?
ReplyDeleteShe is, Patti. She sorta followed in his footsteps, news writing, studying Navajo culture, etc. What she needs is an editor who's not still in a swoon from her father. A brutally honest, good editor. I expected her writing to improve after Spider Woman's Daughter, which actually wasn't so bad, but this last one is awful.
DeleteI have found her books at least as interesting as her Dad's were! I think - to each his/her own!
ReplyDeleteIndeed. Thanks for the visit, Gram.
DeleteI had a comment here, then lost it ... my fault, not Blogger's.
ReplyDeleteAs I said in your first review of one of her books, I have plenty of Tony Hillerman's books to read so will wait and see what I think of hers sometime in the future.
I liked your comment: "I’m stubborn--part Norwegian". We have a close friend with Norwegian roots and he has many strange characteristics, including being stubborn.
LOL I'm 3/4 German. Those are pretty stubborn genes, too. I should probly be called "Cranky," but that name's already taken by a friend.
Delete