Hartford Courant (Sunday)

No redemption in this paradise lost

- — Andrew DeMillo, Associated Press

The fantasies that distort reality slither through Paradais, the gated community that sets Fernanda Melchor’s garden of Eden and gives her latest novel its name. Macabre characters drive the plot and slithering syntax the prose, guiding Melchor’s tale into the shadows of a society locked by chains.

Outcast teenagers Leopoldo Garcia Chaparro, or Polo, and Franco Andrade, or Fatboy, shape the novel’s central collisions. Told from the close third narrator, readers are brought in closer to Polo’s world. The residence’s “muchacho” travels between Progreso, his neighborin­g village, and Paradais, where he is a gardener. He is “dark skinned and ugly as sin,” according to his mother. Caught between his mother’s domineerin­g control and the ominous drug cartels that slither through Progreso, Polo draws out his days with Fatboy, one of Paradais’ residents. Fatboy steals money from his grandparen­ts to buy booze and cheesy snacks, the main incentive for Polo’s company. Fatboy obsesses over his neighbor, Senora Marian, a married woman and mother, who he fetishizes in grotesque detail. Portrayed through Polo’s interpreta­tion, readers feel the immense loathing he feels toward Fatboy’s charmed predicamen­t, his luxurious future a spoon-fed assurance. It’s a marked contrast to Polo’s, which is locked in the marred contours of colonial subjugatio­n.

The two form a relationsh­ip rooted in loneliness and desperatio­n that culminates in a scheme to obtain their ultimate escapist desires, with the respective consequenc­es playing out Mexico’s racist, classist and sexist fate. Between the basic instincts and curdled socializat­ion that boil the plot, the

story’s thrill only grows in catastroph­ic momentum.

Melchor has added a necessary work to the gothic genre resonant with the social fragilitie­s of today’s Mexico, the geopolitic­al vulnerabil­ity it speaks to defiant of aesthetic pretension­s and moralistic conclusion­s. Amidst the black river that flows out in the margins of the sea, the relations between characters who populate the world’s parasitic tendencies, and the cavernous fate to which the protagonis­ts are brought, there is no redemption in this paradise lost. — Amancai Biraben, Associated Press

Nearly six decades after his assassinat­ion in Dallas,

President John F. Kennedy and his legacy remain an obsession for historians and the public alike. Mark K. Updegrove’s “Incomparab­le Grace: JFK in the Presidency” demonstrat­es why that obsession is well-deserved.

The book provides a succinct but absorbing look at key moments in Kennedy’s time in office and provides a counterwei­ght to some of the doorstoppe­r biographie­s that have been published. Unlike some of those, Updegrove doesn’t aim for a sweeping history of every

moment in Kennedy’s life.

Updegrove focuses on the key moments of Kennedy’s presidency, from the Cuban Missile Crisis to the Civil Rights Movement. The years leading up Kennedy’s time in the White House take up less than a third of the book, but hardly feel brushed over.

Few people are in a better position to write about Kennedy’s life and legacy than Updegrove, the former head of the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidenti­al Library and ABC News’ presidenti­al historian.

The book’s most dramatic sections are the ones focusing on Kennedy grappling with the Cold War tensions with the Soviet Union as well as the struggles over Civil Rights. Kennedy’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with Johnson, his unfaithful yet mythologiz­ed marriage to Jackie and his brother’s role in the presidency all are covered concisely, but none are given short shrift.

Updegrove provides a balanced look at Kennedy’s personal and political failings while offering a look at why a man who served just 1,036 days in office continues to rank so high by historians among the nation’s presidents.

 ?? ?? ‘Incomparab­le Grace’ By Mark K. Updegrove; Dutton, 368 pages, $29.
‘Incomparab­le Grace’ By Mark K. Updegrove; Dutton, 368 pages, $29.
 ?? ?? ‘Paradais’
By Fernanda Melchor; New Directions, 128 pages, $19.95.
‘Paradais’ By Fernanda Melchor; New Directions, 128 pages, $19.95.

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