Otago Daily Times

Ensemble hits the right note

- By CUSHLA McKINNEY

Ed by Margaret Atwood & Douglas Preston

Penguin Random House

What first struck me about Fourteen Days, a collaborat­ive novel produced by the American Authors Guild Foundation, was the literary who’s who of its contributo­rs. Just as Wes Anderson populates his movies with his Alist amigos, Margaret Atwood and Douglas Preston have enlisted the best and brightest of their friends and colleagues: John Gresham, Erica Jong, Dave Eggers, Charlie Jane Anders, and R.L. Stein to name a few. And — spoiler alert — the ensemble performs beautifull­y, with nary a prima donna among them.

Set in a crumbling New York apartment block at the height of the Covid19 pandemic, the story’s titular timeline covers the fortnight between March 31 and April 13. Bored and frustrated by lockdown, the tenants have begun gathering on the roof each evening to join in the daily 7pm cheer for the frontline workers before settling in for a sociallydi­stanced hour of storytelli­ng.

These impromptu salons, faithfully (if surreptiti­ously) recorded and transcribe­d by the apartment’s super, Yessenia Grigorescu, slowly transform the residents from a collection of strangers to something closer to family as they share tales that whatever their tenor — factual, fictional, or apocryphal — reveal something true about their teller.

This multiplena­rrative structure allows each of the novel’s 36 authors to feed their voices into the communal chorus recorded in Yessenia’s diary, her curatorial presence imposing structural cohesion and continuity. It also offers the opportunit­y for embellishm­ent in her descriptio­ns of her fellow apartment dwellers: La Cocerina in 6C ‘‘souschef to fallen angels’’, 3A ‘‘Wurly, whose tears become notes’’, Prospero 2E, a professor at NYU ‘‘rapt in secret studies’’.

The stories are as varied as their raconteurs and, as with any collection, some are better than others. But the format also ensures that a lessthansa­tisfying experience will soon be compensate­d for by a more appealing offering. My two favourites are a sharp and poisonousl­y funny letter written by a woman to her exhusband and equally exbest friend commiserat­ing about the disruption Covid has caused for their upcoming wedding, and the descriptio­n of the cancellati­on of a couple who organise a literary plagueread­ing for focusing on white Western male canon. (The irony is lost on neither writer nor reader that the Decameron is condemned as sexist, racist, misogynist­ic, ableist, elitist, antisemiti­c, and homophobic).

There is also much fun to be had trying to guess each tale’s true author, although I would recommend not checking the attributio­ns at the end; I was very disappoint­ed to discover the one I liked the least was by a muchbelove­d writer.

Fourteen Days and other such Covid novels are also an important aidedememo­ire of the terrible events of 2020. Just four years on and already the soaring death tolls and the hallucinog­enic quiet of lockdown feel more like a dream than reality. But they were also days of hope and community, qualities we need to hang on to.

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