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![]() Contents | May 2001 In This Issue (Contributors) More on books from The Atlantic Monthly. From Atlantic Unbound: Interviews: "'All Change Is Fascinating'" (July 3, 1997) Paul Theroux talks about his novel, Kowloon Tong, and the implications of the Hong Kong handover. Includes a collection of Theroux's essays and short stories from The Atlantic Monthly. |
The Atlantic Monthly | May 2001
New & Noteworthy Hotel Honolulu by Paul Theroux Houghton Mifflin 432 pages, $26.00
The writing is at its best when Theroux is sketching a side of Hawaii that tourists might see but never understand—the service-industry workers and expatriate landowners who try to find some sort of permanence in this most temporary of states. The book brims with eccentric characters and their wild, usually morbid tales. Philandering honeymooners, priapic Japanese businessmen, a shoe fetishist, and a 650-pound pop star make raucous cameo appearances, but it is the characters that hang around, such as a mail-order Filipina bride, a venomous journalist known as Madam Ma, and the bibulous Buddy, who linger in the reader's imagination. Theroux is less successful with his narrator, whose voice is merely a half-hearted attempt at exploring the sort of literary counterlife that so interests the author. The reluctant manager remains too anemic a presence to unite the novel in a coherent fictional scheme; the demons that keep him from writing are never satisfactorily conjured. His wife, Sweetie, who is supposedly the illegitimate daughter of JFK, and their wild child, Rose, are querulous and underdeveloped in comparison with the other residents. Theroux would have been wiser to check himself out of Hotel Honolulu and let it become the short-story collection it clearly longs to be. —Stephen Amidon
Copyright © 2001 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; May 2001; New & Noteworthy - 01.05; Volume 287, No. 5; page 121-122. | [an error occurred while processing this directive] |
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