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Other segments from the episode on May 12, 2022
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DAVE DAVIES, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. Hernan Diaz's first novel, "In The Distance," was a deliberate resurrection of the once-popular genre of the Western and was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize. His latest novel is called "Trust." And book critic Maureen Corrigan says its story is also grounded in American mythology. Here's her review.
MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: "Trust" by Hernan Diaz is one of those novels that's always pulling a fast one on a reader. Take the opening section. You settle in, become absorbed in the story, and then a hundred pages or so later, boom. The novel lurches into another narrative that upends the truth of everything that came before. When a work of fiction reminds me that it is a work of fiction simply to show me how gullible I am, well, thanks. I knew that already. But sometimes, these metadramatic maneuvers serve as novel's larger themes. Susan Choi's 2019 novel "Trust Exercise," about the misleading powers of art and memory is one recent instance. Now Diaz's "Trust" is another. That word trust, in both their titles, is a tipoff that that's exactly what we readers shouldn't do upon entering these slippery fictional worlds. "Trust" is all about money, particularly the flimflam force of money in the stock market and its potential, as a character says, to bend and align reality to its own purposes.
The opening section is imagined as a novel within a novel, entitled "Bonds," a 1937 bestseller about the rise of a Wall Street tycoon named Benjamin Rask. Think of figures like J.P. Morgan and Charles Schwab, men whose DNA was made of strands of ticker tape. We learn that Rask is that rarest of creatures - a wealthy man without appetites. Our narrator tells us Rask is fascinated by only one thing.
(Reading) If asked, Rask would probably have found it hard to explain what drew him to the world of finance. It was the complexity of it, yes, but also the fact that he viewed capital as an antiseptically living thing. There was no need for him to touch a single banknote or engage with the things and people his transactions affected. All he had to do was think, speak and, perhaps, write. And the living creature would be set in motion.
For the sake of posterity, Rask does eventually marry an equally self-contained woman named Helen. Throughout the Roaring '20s, Rask accrues wealth and Helen finds her place as a patron of the arts. Then comes the crash of 1929. Because Rask profits from other speculators' losses, rumors circulate that he rigged the crash, and he and Helen are ostracized.
The final chapters of this saga detail Helen's ordeal as a patient at a psychiatric institute in Switzerland. Her mania and her eczema, described as a merciless, red, flat monster gnawing on her skin, are reminiscent of the real-life torments of Zelda Fitzgerald.
The opening section of "Trust," as I've said, is so sharply realized, it's disorienting to begin the novel's next section, composed of notes on a story that sounds like the one we've just read. But then Diaz lures us readers into once again suspending our disbelief when we reach the captivating third section of his novel, which mostly takes place during the Great Depression.
There, a young woman from Brooklyn named Ida Partenza becomes the secretary and ghostwriter for a financial mogul named Andrew Bevel. Bevel's life is the source for that best-selling novel "Bonds," and he's so infuriated by that novel, he's had all copies removed from the New York Public Library system. Bevel hires Ida to help him write a memoir that will set the record straight. Sure. The fourth and final section of "Trust" is wired with booby traps, blowing the whole artifice up before our wide open eyes.
"Trust" is an ingeniously constructed historical novel with a postmodern point. Throughout, Diaz makes a connection between the realms of fiction and finance. As Ida's father, an Italian anarchist, says...
(Reading) Money is a fantastic commodity. You can't eat or wear money, but it represents all the food and clothes in the world. This is why it's a fiction. Stocks, shares, bonds - do you think any of these things those bandits buy and sell represent any real concrete value? No. That's what all these criminals trade in - fictions.
Literary fiction, too, is a fantastic commodity in which our best writers, criminals of the imagination, steal our attention and our very desires. Diaz, whose last novel reworked the myths of masculine individualism in the American West, makes an artistic fortune in "Trust." And we readers make out like bandits, too.
DAVIES: Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed "Trust" by Hernan Diaz.
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