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

Review: Lark and Termite

Total immersion
By PETER KEOUGH  |  January 29, 2009

090130_lark_main
PLASTIC ART: Phillips wields words as if they were a physical substance — like paint or wood.

Lark and Termite | by Jayne Anne Phillips | Alfred A. Knopf | 272 pages | $24
"Language Immersion" is the name of a program set up by the US Army in Korea just prior to the North's invasion of the South. It plays a part in Jayne Anne Phillips's new novel, and the term also might describe elements of Phillips's style, in which the meaning and the music of words combine in a fugue-like poetry. Immersion in language didn't help much in turning back the North Koreans, but as practiced by Phillips it invokes individual souls, re-creating their worlds and the love that binds them.

Like her Machine Dreams, which she wrote 25 years ago, Lark and Termite tells the story of a family torn by war, the narrative related through alternating points of view, in chapters labeled with the characters' names and taking place over the course of several years. In the new book she tightens the structure, condensing the story into two parallel four-day periods — July 26-28 and a coda on July 31 — set nine years apart and separated by thousands of miles but connected by a kind of metempsychosis. Some characters and their relationships remain ambiguous until the end. Ties of blood and language and maybe a touch of the supernatural conjure a mystic connection, one made credible by Phillips's precise rendering of setting and voice.

Voices like that of Corporal Robert Leavitt, a young trumpet player (the resemblance to Pruitt in From Here to Eternity might be intentional) enlisted into the above-mentioned military program ("Language Immersion Seoul only deepened Leavitt's belief in language and sound as the only tincture of reality") because of his "tonal familiarity" and "auditory sophistication." These don't help much after the Communists sweep over the Yalu River, routing the thin UN and South Korean defenses. It's July 26, 1950, and Leavitt takes charge of a platoon escorting refugees through the chaos to safety, his consciousness flooded by horrific details and illumined by memories of his pregnant wife, Lola.

Exactly nine years later, 17-year-old Lark, spirited and formidable, is tending to her half-brother, who's nicknamed "Termite," she thinks because "he's in himself like a termite's in a wall." Their mother and father are gone and it's left to their Aunt Nonie to raise the two siblings, helped and hindered by a loosely extended family in the town of Winfield, West Virginia. A storm is brewing, however, and not just a pathetic fallacy, to threaten the fragile mûnage.

Lark's first-person account is level-headed and lyrical (all the characters share a gift for similes), providing necessary exposition and a burning edge of nascent awareness and sexuality. But though he's half-formed, paraplegic, near-blind, pre-verbal, and prone to echolalia, Termite in his third-person stream-of-consciousness chapters tends to hear and see things more clearly than the others, penetrating to the true nature of such talismanic objects as an orange feral cat, blue strips of plastic, a perfume bottle shaped like the man in the moon, and an albino man who claims to be from Child Services.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Review: Kimjongilia, Review: Countdown to Zero, Authors tote their wares to area bookstores, More more >
  Topics: Books , Media, Books, U.S. Army,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/17 ]   "Guys, Gals, and Glitter"  @ Club Café
ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: CORIOLANUS  |  February 16, 2012
    In a line of fascist-style stagings of the Bard from Orson Welles's 1937 black-shirted Julius Caesar to Richard Loncraine's brown-shirted Richard III (1998), Ralph Fiennes sets his lean and hungry take on Shakespeare's tragedy in a mo dern-day war zone, paring the play to a brisk two hours.
  •   REVIEW: SAFE HOUSE  |  February 15, 2012
    Daniel Espinosa's over-edited but engaging spy thriller delves into edgy territory untouched by any of the numerous movies it imitates: it has Brendan Gleeson do an American accent.
  •   REVIEW: THE SECRET WORLD OF ARRIETTY  |  February 15, 2012
    The most touching love story and best children's movie in a long time, Hiromasa Yonebayashi's adaptation of Mary Norton's book The Borrowers employs old-fashioned animation techniques to create a world that is familiar, uncanny, and luminous.
  •   REVIEW: RAMPART  |  February 15, 2012
    The rotten cop flick has become a mini-genre of sorts, a subset of noir, going back at least to Orson Welles's Touch of Evil .
  •   REVIEW: THE OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS 2012: DOCUMENTARY  |  February 10, 2012
    The films in this program contain some of the most powerful images to be seen on the screen this year.

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH

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