Colum McCann (New York: Random
House, 2009) Paper, 375 pages. U.S. $15.00
Balance, risk, plausible coincidence--these
are the warp in the story woven by Colum McCann; courage, love, and
grief are the woof.
The preacher at the funeral of a
young prostitute from a particularly seedy street in the South Bronx
captures the context for the first part of the book: “The house of
justice had been vandalized, he said. Young girls like Jazzlyn were
forced to do horrific things. As they grew older the world had
demanded terrible things of them. This was a vile world. . . . The
only way to fight it was with charity, justice, and goodness. It
was not a simple plea, he said, not at all. Goodness was more
difficult than evil.” (p. 145)
Charity and goodness mingle with
“the girls” in the person of John Corrigan, known simply as
“Corrigan.” Corrigan is a radical monk in an order left
unidentified and vague; he is both connected and not connected. His
only visit from a fellow monk of his order ends in mutual
non-understanding. He lives on the fifth floor of a wretched
tenement, with a minimum of decrepit furniture. He has befriended
the prostitutes on his street; he allows them to use his bathroom,
and he takes beatings from their pimps, who resent this interference
with their control of their stable. Corrigan also takes the elderly
residents of a nursing home for outings, always gently concerned for
their comfort. He falls in love with Adelita, an aide at the
nursing home, who returns his love. The inner struggle that ensues
would, in a lesser writer, be the stuff of cliché. McCann, however,
takes us into the soul of a man torn apart by two loves.
Corrigan is critically injured
when a car sideswipes the van he is driving, returning to the South
Bronx with Jazzlyn, who had been arraigned in a Manhattan court.
Jazzlyn is killed outright; Corrigan dies in the hospital. In the
third part of the book, we meet Lara, passenger in the car that
caused the accident and failed to stop. She is haunted by the image
of the girl “all smashed up.” ( p. 121). McCann traces her search
for the identity of the girl and her encounter with Corrigan’s
brother, Ciaran. He ends this section with its title, following one
of the many instances in which his prose slips into poetry. Lara
has left Ciaran in a bar, where they had talked of Corrigan and
Jazzlyn, and not at all about what was growing between them. She
looks at Ciaran through the window, and he sees her: “He glanced up
in my direction and I froze. Quickly I turned away. There are rocks
deep enough in this earth that no matter what the rupture, they will
never see the surface. There is, I think, a fear of love. There is
a fear of love.” (p. 156)
Between these two sections, we
meet a group of women who gather regularly to share their grief over
the loss of their sons in Viet Nam. There seems to be no connection
to Corrigan and Jazzlyn. In a later section, however, Gloria, the
only African-American in the group, impulsively takes under her care
Jazzlyn’s children, having no awareness of whose they are. And
later still, one of those children, grown, returns to a Park Avenue
penthouse to say good-bye to the dying Claire Soderberg, one of the
grieving women, and a close friend of Gloria.
With exquisite art and complete plausibility
McCann draws these and other disparate characters together. Above
them all, removed, yet touching each of them, is the walker/dancer
on the cable stretched between the twin towers of the World Trade
Center, his long pole countering every minute shift in balance.
Today’s reader will instinctively connect this feat, based on the
historical walk of Philippe Petit in 1974, with the destruction of
the towers in 2001. For the characters in the novel, it is a
wonder, provoking questions and illusions. It is drama high above
the streets--spectacular, high-risk, open only to a person of
singular skill and daring. Meanwhile, on the streets, in the
tenements, and in Park Avenue penthouses, the everyday drama of
everyday people unfolds quietly.
As in any serious novel, in Let the Great
World Spin, theology meets life. Women without hope struggle
for a better life for their children, mothers grieve the loss of
their children, a woman is transformed by compassion, failure in
communication isolates wife from husband. It is the stuff of life
that feeds the preacher.
Pat Chaffee, OP
Racine, Wisconsin
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