SAUL AND PATSY
Charles Baxter, . . Pantheon, $24 (317pp) ISBN 978-0-375-41029-1
Despite its title, this searching, reflective novel is less concerned with couplehood than it is with the fretful inner life of one half of the eponymous married pair. Saul Bernstein, a literary descendant of Bellow's Herzog, is a transplanted Baltimore Jew, observing his newfound hometown—the "dusty, luckless" fictional city of Five Oaks, Mich.—with an ill-at-ease hyperawareness. Young-marrieds Saul and Patsy move to Five Oaks from Evanston, Ill., when Saul is hired to teach at the local high school. They rent a farmhouse, where they make love in every room and even in the backyard, settling into the rhythms of domestic life. Patsy, a former modern dancer who finds work as a bank teller, gives birth to a daughter, and with infinite patience tolerates her "professional worrier" of a husband. The narrative is dense with quotidian detail, precisely charted shifts of consciousness and pitch-perfect moments of emotional truth, but Baxter (
Reviewed on: 07/28/2003
Genre: Fiction
Analog Audio Cassette - 978-1-59007-472-5
Compact Disc - 978-1-59777-149-8
Compact Disc - 978-1-59007-473-2
Hardcover - 543 pages - 978-0-7862-6224-3
Open Ebook - 219 pages - 978-0-307-42761-8
Paperback - 317 pages - 978-0-375-70916-6
Pre-Recorded Audio Player - 978-1-60640-677-9