Current:Home > ContactIn 'The New Earth,' a family's pain echoes America's suffering -Streamline Finance
In 'The New Earth,' a family's pain echoes America's suffering
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:40:14
Jess Row's new novel begins with a long, unsent email that's also a poem. It was written by Bering Wilcox to her brother, Patrick, not long before she was killed in the West Bank:
"...We Wilcoxes have never known
what would have sufficed. We wanted too much
and got nothing. I declare, game over. For the
time being. For this lifetime. This marriage of
five unhappy minds... "
Those five unhappy minds are the focus of The New Earth, Row's novel about an American family that has imploded, one that's broken, possibly irretrievably. It's a stunning book, a high-wire balancing act that tries to do a lot — and succeeds.
Early in the novel, the patriarch of the family, Sandy, plans to kill himself by jumping off the balcony of his New York apartment. He reconsiders, but ends up making another rash decision, abandoning his job as a lawyer and moving to Vermont, where he and his wife, Naomi, converted a house into a Zen Buddhist temple 40 years before.
Naomi is living in Woods Hole, Massachusetts; a geophysicist, she's on extended research leave from Columbia University. She's made her peace, kind of, with her separation from her husband, and now lives with her new partner, Tilda, who works at an oceanographic institution.
Both Sandy and Naomi, as well as their two surviving children, Patrick and Winter, are haunted by the past. When the children were young adults, Naomi finally revealed to them that her biological father was Black; the kids had been raised white and Jewish. "That's what made the lie so painful, honestly, it was that she robbed us of this aspect of who we were, because she was ashamed of it, and then that transferred the shame onto us," Winter explains to her fiancé, Zeno, a construction worker from Mexico.
Two years after that, Bering, the youngest of the clan and a peace activist, is killed by an Israeli sniper in the West Bank. Following her slaying, Patrick, who had a close relationship with his Bering — although a deeply troubling one — becomes a monk in Nepal, and doesn't speak to his family for three years.
The frame of the story in The New Earth is Winter's attempts to gather all of the living Wilcoxes to celebrate her wedding to Zeno, who has overstayed his visa and is in danger of being deported. (The novel mostly takes place in 2018, when President Donald Trump was scapegoating immigrants to anyone who would listen.) This proves difficult: Sandy and Naomi have reached a possible point of no return in their estrangement, and Patrick is typically cagey: as Winter says, he's "a person of obscure motives, maybe even to himself. Frantically needing to get in touch, then not calling for weeks, months."
There are many moving parts in The New Earth, and it's to Row's immense credit that it's not difficult to keep up with him. He does, helpfully, provide a timeline at the end of the novel, which switches from the past to the present fitfully. There are digressions in the book that deal with climate change, philosophy, race, and the Israel-Palestine conflict. And there is an undercurrent of meta-narrative present in the text: "Because the novel holds us all in place. He, who is speaking; I, writing; you, reading. The novel does our thinking for us. At the beginning it holds us around the legs."
In the hands of a less skilled writer, this could be a recipe for disaster. But Row weaves all the threads together masterfully; sections flow into one another in a way that's seamless. The switches in perspective and prose style are never jarring except when they need to be, and Row's use of language is surprising, at times, and unfailingly beautiful: "America is dead," he writes. "That isn't the right way to say it. The United States of America is dead. If I say it's dead to me, it is dead. If I say, mother country, I have no other, you are dead. The way the sunlight glows in the leaves of the red maple of the lawn: dead. The blue hill over the blue waters of the bay: dead. What thou loves remains: dead."
Although it takes place five years ago, The New Earth is very much a novel of our times. Early in the book, Sandy talks about "congestion": Congestion of emotions. A calcification of feelings. Too much feeling over too much time." This resonates in a country that's been put on its heels by COVID, political unrest, and bigotry — America keeps sustaining wound after wound, with never enough time to heal from the previous ones. The pain of the Wilcox family, and its dissolution, echoes the country's current suffering.
The New Earth isn't an easy book to write about — it's elusive by design. What is this novel, that talks to and about itself, that asks unanswerable questions? The closest answer might be: It's a modern epic that takes an unsparing look at family and national dynamics that nobody really wants to confront. It's ambitious and magnificent, the rare swing for the fences that actually connects.
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- A historic theater is fighting a plan for a new courthouse in Georgia’s second-largest city
- Paris Hilton and Carter Reum Welcome Baby No. 2: Look Back at Their Fairytale Romance
- Indian authorities release Kashmiri journalist Fahad Shah after 21 months in prison
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- The Best Dyson Black Friday Deals of 2023: Score $100 Off the Airwrap & More
- Oregon defeats Oregon State for spot in the Pac-12 title game as rivalry ends for now
- Israeli government approves Hamas hostage deal, short-term cease-fire in Gaza
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Lawsuit accuses actor Jamie Foxx of New York City sexual assault in 2015
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Spoilers! The best Disney references in 'Wish' (including that tender end-credits scene)
- New Zealand’s new government promises tax cuts, more police and less bureaucracy
- Police warn residents to stay indoors after extremely venomous green mamba snake escapes in the Netherlands
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Small Business Saturday: Why is it becoming more popular than Black Friday?
- Avalanche in west Iran kills 5 mountain climbers and injures another 4
- The debate over Ukraine aid was already complicated. Then it became tangled up in US border security
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Police identify North Carolina man fatally shot by officer during Thanksgiving traffic stop
Sean 'Diddy' Combs accused of sexual abuse by two more women
The Excerpt podcast: Israel-Hamas truce deal delayed, won't start before Friday
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
The Excerpt podcast: Cease-fire between Hamas and Israel begins, plus more top stories
Internet casinos thrive in 6 states. So why hasn’t it caught on more widely in the US?
How algorithms determine what you'll buy for the holidays — and beyond