The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Books  |  Comedy  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Jersey state of mind

Richard Ford takes a final swing through the Garden State
By JON GARELICK  |  November 10, 2006

Richard Ford created Frank Bascombe in The Sportswriter (1986), returned to him in Independence Day (1995), for which he won a Pulitzer Prize and a PEN/Faulkner Award, and has now come back to him for what he says is the last time in The Lay of the Land (Knopf, 496 pages, $26.95). In the current book, which takes place over the course of three days culminating in Thanksgiving 2000, the former-sportswriter-turned-real-estate-agent, now 55, is contending with prostate cancer, an ex-wife, his separation from his current spouse, and his two grown children. After the equanimity of the “Existence Period” in Independence Day, the garrulous Bascombe is trying to accommodate himself to the “Permanent Period” of life, where “we try to be what we are in the present — good or not so good . . . so that accepting final credit for ourselves won’t be such a shock later on.” But the three books are as much about New Jersey — its underpraised suburban everyman sprawl — and Bascombe’s first-person narrator voice is a way to get into it, a “language of affirmation” for a setting that, as Ford told the New York Times’ Charles McGrath, is “faintly risible.” Ford, a native Mississippian who lives in New Orleans and Maine with his wife, Kristina, is the author of six books of fiction in addition to the Bascombe saga. He talked to me on the phone from Washington, DC, where he was on a book tour that brings him to the Brookline Booksmith reading series at the Coolidge Corner Theatre on November 16.


HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Former-sportswriter-turned-real-estate-agent Frank, now 55, is contending with prostate cancer, an ex-wife, his separation from his current spouse, and his two grown children.

When did you first conceive this third Frank Bascombe book?
I started thinking about it in 2002. When I finished Independence Day, people kept asking me if I was going to write a third book and so I guess in a sort of a generic way I conceded silently to myself that I could try. But not until I got over my book of short stories, A Multitude of Sins [2002], did I really sit down and start addressing myself to it and going through my notebooks and combing through all that and beginning to marshal together a lot of material for it.

Were you inspired by going back to the physical place?
Partly it was a process of wanting to write about the Jersey shore. I had a nice little taste of writing about the Jersey shore in Independence Day, and that was one of the strongest impulses that I had. I really wanted to try my best to create the illusion of life over there and to try to dedicate some language to the place and to the sensations about that place and in a way summon it

Did you always conceive of it as taking place over these three days?
Yes, I always thought it would be a Thanksgiving book. I wasn’t sure exactly what year it would be, but since I started thinking about it after 9/11, it became immediately clear to me that I would not be able to set the book after 9/11 because I just didn’t have the wherewithal to undertake a book that had 9/11 in it. And it didn’t seem possible that you could write a book — at least in those days — that took place afterwards that didn’t have it somehow in it. And I just didn’t feel that the facts of 9/11 had sufficiently worn down so that an act of imagination like a novel would have much to contribute.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Tales of the times, Lions and lambs, Growing Maine culture, More more >
  Topics: Books , Culture and Lifestyle, Media, Health and Fitness,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/18 ]   "Boston Facial Hair Fiasco!"  @ Church of Boston
[ 02/18 ]   Cuffs + Woollen Kits + Headband  @ Plough & Stars
[ 02/18 ]   The Ducky Boys + Hudson Falcons + Energy  @ Great Scott
ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DOMINIQUE EADE AT SCULLERS  |  February 10, 2012
    "I'm discontented with homes that I've rented/so I have invented my own," sang Dominque Eade slowly, over a simple bass accompaniment.
  •   CAN THE CHARLES RIVER ESPLANADE BE TRANSFORMED INTO THE WORLD'S BEST PARK?  |  February 17, 2012
    What if — in place of the current three-story Museum of Science parking garage overlooking the Charles River — there loomed a giant Ferris wheel, on the order of the London Eye?
  •   TIM BERNE COMPOSES HIMSELF  |  February 07, 2012
    It's been almost exactly four years since Tim Berne's last visit to Boston— March 2008, to be precise, with jazz-prog guitarist David Torn's band Prezens.
  •   JASON MORAN AT JORDAN HALL  |  February 03, 2012
    I have to admit, I was not sanguine at the beginning of this highly anticipated concert by pianist and composer Jason Moran.
  •   MARISSA AND CHARLES LICATA AT SCULLERS  |  February 02, 2012
    I can't remember the last time I saw a costume change in the middle of a jazz show — if ever — but violinist Marissa Licata's performance with her father, saxophonist Charles Licata, and their band held all kinds of surprises.

 See all articles by: JON GARELICK

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed