The Columbus Dispatch

Author addresses what it means to be American

- Dwight Garner

The presidency of Donald Trump, like a motorcycle that sets off twothirds of the car alarms on a city street, has affected different writers in different ways. Some have gone nearly mad, for worse and sometimes better; some have tightened their noise-canceling headphones and pretended the moral disruption isn’t there.

For Ayad Akhtar, the Trump presidency has led to ‘‘Homeland Elegies,’’ a beautiful novel about an American son and his immigrant father that has echoes of ‘‘The Great Gatsby’’ and that circles, with pointed intellect, the possibilit­ies and limitation­s of American life.

Akhtar is best known as a playwright. In 2013, he won a Pulitzer Prize for ‘‘Disgraced,’’ a dinner-party-gonewrong drama that deals with Muslims in America, 9/11, money and identity politics. Akhtar was recently named the new president of PEN America, the literary and human rights organizati­on.

‘‘Homeland Elegies’’ is Akhtar’s second novel. His first, ‘‘American Dervish’’ (2012), was a coming-of-age story about a boy in a Muslim family in pre9/11 America. It had its charms, but it was tentative and ultimately minor. Reading it you didn’t sense, as you do in this new one, the cascade of Akhtar’s thinking, informed as it is by wit and banked anger.

‘‘Homeland Elegies’’ is a hybrid: It’s part memoir, part novel. The narrator shares the author’s name and much of his biography. Both were born in New

York City and raised in Milwaukee by parents, doctors, who were born in Pakistan. Akhtar and his narrator each attended Brown University; each has written a Pulitzer Prize-winning play and has worked in Hollywood.

This novel gets off to a slow start. We meet many members of the narrator’s sprawling extended family: cousins, uncles and aunts. One wonders for about 85 pages when Akhtar’s book will settle, and when he will find a direction

in which to aim his stories.

The narrator relates his fairly idyllic American childhood; he loved sitcom laugh tracks and Uncle Sam in the post office and his 10-speed Schwinn bicycle. His father loved America even more.

An elite heart specialist, the narrator’s father had, in the 1990s, an elite patient: Trump himself, who had been having heart palpitatio­ns. He briefly treated Trump and, in the process, became enamored with his wealth and charisma.

He began to dine in Trump’s favorite restaurant­s, had fittings with Trump’s tailor and, envious of Trump’s sex life, began sleeping with an expensive prostitute. He also started to drink heavily and spent too much time in casinos. His fondness is largely unabated even after Trump becomes an erratic president and seeks to impose a travel ban that would apply to members of his own family.

Many of the most powerful moments in ‘‘Homeland Elegies’’ deal with the narrator’s life in the years after 9/11. There are powerfully written scenes of confrontat­ion between Akhtar and cops, strangers and others who are suspicious of him.

The narrator becomes a successful playwright. His life changes further, and this novel steps up to another level, when he meets a man named Riaz Rind, a very wealthy Pakistani American hedge fund founder. Rind is this novel’s Gatsby.

Rind throws decadent parties and visits elite burlesque clubs and likes black truffles and rare bourbons; he introduces Akhtar to the good life. He invests a small inheritanc­e for Akhtar and makes him several million dollars. Before long, the narrator is having trouble getting work done because he’s at Lake Como staying next door to the Clooneys. He indulges his pagan appetites.

There are seamy aspects to Rind’s affairs, but he is no caricature and no buffoon. He understand­s the levers of power and intends to work them. He’s an intellectu­al who has a lot to say about the nature of debt and about Judge Robert H. Bork’s contributi­ons to the eliminatio­n of checks on private enterprise.

Rind and the narrator argue about historian Bernard Lewis and about why Muslim countries have fallen behind in some regards. Rind makes the point that Muslims had no corporatio­ns, so assets weren’t protected after an owner’s death.

‘‘That’s why we’re behind,’’ he says. ‘‘Because Muslim laws were trying to take care of wives and children! We’re behind because we cared more about what happened to people than money! What about getting that message out there!’’

Rind has a scheme to take financial revenge on certain people who have discrimina­ted against Muslims in America. Will he pull it off? Will the narrator’s aging father survive a malpractic­e lawsuit?

There’s a lot more in this novel. There is good writing about Salman Rushdie and syphilis and hoof stew and Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia, and screenwrit­ing, among many other things.

Akhtar’s play ‘‘Disgraced’’ ignited when a Muslim American character admitted he felt an unwelcome blush of pride during the 9/11 attacks, an uneasy admiration for Osama bin Laden’s achievemen­ts in corpse-making. The repercussi­ons of having written those lines come into play in this novel as well.

‘‘Homeland Elegies’’ is a very American novel. It’s a lover’s quarrel with this country, and at its best it has candor and seriousnes­s to burn.

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