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Russell Banks' first
novel, Family
Life converts the drama of a family depicted as a royal family
in a present-day kingdom that could be easily turned into a script
for a play. The story is about the Queen Naomi Ruth, (the unfaithful
wife), the King Egress (the Hearty, sometimes the Bluff), three
princes: the oldest son called Orgone, who is known for his skills
as a wrestler and in copulation, Dread who drove sports cars and
was a big game hunter, and Egress the wild), who was a bad drunk,
melancholy and a favorite of those who had fallen from grace of
any kind. Also there is the mysterious youth in the slick green
suit known by only aliases, who has a thing for princes and the
loon who was called Loon, sometimes Lone, Lon, Lonnie, l'Ange,
Lawn or Lune.
Banks explores sexual
relationships among different class and of same sex within his
novel. Each of the characters exhibits weaknesses that lead to
their downfall. Family life is a story with in a story that is
shocking, yet entreats you to read on. The underlying themes of
debauchery, assassination, disorder, travel, rebellion, hilarity,
adoration and defeat is captivating and plays on the feelings
of the reader. Banks has a gift that allows us to witness a situation
through the eyes of the contrasting characters, as they express
their feelings with proficiency and understanding.
Family Life is a
short novel that can be read in a couple of hours, and it is comprised
of easy flowing language that is definitely a 'page turner'. Banks
unique style of writing is appealing because it as all the components
for an exciting read.
"Well worth
investigating," says the Washington Post Book World.
"He writes a
fine, clear prose -- some of the best, in fact, now being written
by anyone," says the New York Times Book Review.
Some of his newest
novels include Rule of the Bone, was published in May 1995, The
Sweet Hereafter and Affliction. Banks has won numerous awards
and prizes for his work, such as the Guggenheim Fellowship, the
National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowships,
Ingram Merrill Award, the St. Lawrence Award for Short Fiction,
O. Henry and Best American Short Story Award, the John Dos Passos
Award, and the Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts
and Letters. Continental Drift was a finalist for the Pulitzer
Prize in 1986 and Affliction was short-listed for both the PEN/Faulkner
Fiction Prize and the Irish International Prize.
Banks has lived
in a variety of places, from New England to Jamaica, which have
contributed to the richness of his writing. However, his time
is currently divided between teaching creative writing at Princeton
University and living in Ausable Chasm, upstate New York.
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