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The Dogs of Babel : A Novel by Carolyn Parkhurst
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Carolyn Parkhurst Edition: Paperback Format: Bargain Price Published: 2004-06-07 ISBN: 0316011037 Number of pages: 288 Publisher: Bay Back Books
Book Reviews of The Dogs of Babel : A NovelBook Review: Loss and Loyalty and Love Summary: 5 Stars
The story of a man searching for answers in the mysterious death of his wife has been told before - many times. But never, in my reading anyway, has it been told quite like Carolyn Parkhurst tells it in "The Dogs of Babel."
It's the tale of Paul Iverson, whose wife Lexy dies when she falls out of the high branches of a tree. The only witness to the event is their dog, Lorelei. The death is ruled as accidental, and the only reasons Paul has to question that are vague suggestions - a rearranged bookshelf, a steak seemingly cooked just for the dog, and a voice heard on a late-night psychic call-in show. Paul, a linguist by trade, decides that his only recourse is to teach Lorelei to talk, so she can tell him what she saw.
If it sounds far-fetched, it should. "The Dogs of Babel" is about many things, but of course a big part of the story is about grief and the extremes it can push us to. For the grieving, the insane can seem perfectly reasonable. Teaching a dog to talk, for example, can seem plausible and even achievable. Paul's motivations, while heartbreaking, are always clear. The conclusion of the novel is not a "big twist" ending, though there are surprises in store to be sure, and the ending satisfies both in terms of plot and emotional resonance.
"The Dogs of Babel" unfolds like an origami crane, detail by detail, until all is revealed. Careful and measured and crafted almost to perfection, it is a marvel of subtlety and grace in storytelling. The language of the book has a cadence and a beauty that is rare in modern fiction. I was reminded at times of Alice Sebold's "Lovely Bones" for the mystical quality of the prose, at other times of Jose Saramago's "Stone Raft" for its odd sense of surrealism - both books I admire deeply. Simply put, this is a beautiful book.
Lyrical, surprising, engaging, moving, and enlightening - "The Dogs of Babel" is all of these and more. It resonates and echoes in the heart with an honesty few books ever find. Other books about grief and loss and the quest for answers wish they could be this book.
Summary of The Dogs of Babel : A NovelWhen his wife dies in a fall from a tree in their backyard, linguist Paul Iverson is wild with despair. In the days that follow, Paul becomes certain that Lexy's death was no accident. Strange clues have been left behind: unique, personal messages that only she could have left and that he is determined to decipher. So begins Paul's fantastic and even perilous search for the truth, as he abandons his everyday life to embark on a series of experiments designed to teach his dog Lorelei to communicate. Is this the project of a madman? Or does Lorelei really have something to tell him about the last afternoon of a woman he only thought he knew?... The quirky premise of Carolyn Parkhurst's debut novel, The Dogs of Babel, is original enough: after his wife Lexy dies after falling from a tree, linguistics professor Paul Iverson becomes obsessed with teaching their dog, a Rhodesian Ridgeback named Lorelei (the sole witness to the tragedy), to speak so he can find out the truth about Lexy's death--was it accidental or did Lexy commit suicide? In short, accelerating chapters Parkhurst alternates between Paul's strange and passionate efforts to get Lorelei to communicate and his heartfelt memories of his whirlwind relationship with Lexy. The first 100 pages or so bring to mind another noteworthy debut, Alice Sebold's brilliant exploration of grief, The Lovely Bones. Unfortunately, the second half of The Dogs of Babel takes too many odd twists and turns--everything from a Ms. Cleo-like TV psychic to an underground sect of abusive canine linguists--to ever allow the reader to feel any real sympathy for the main characters. Parkhurst's Paul Iverson can certainly be appealing at times, and his heartbreak is often quite palpable ("...for every dark moment we shared between us, there was a moment of such brightness I almost could not bear to look at it head-on."). But his mask-maker wife Lexy--Paul's driving inspiration--is a character whose spur-of-the-moment outbursts, spontaneous fits of anger, and supposedly charming sense of whimsy (on their first date, they drive from Virginia to Disney World, eating only appetizers and side dishes along the way), become so annoying and grating that it's hard to believe anyone could ever put up with her, let alone teach their dog to speak for her. Despite its cloying tone, The Dogs of Babel marks a notable debut. Parkhurst possesses a wealth of inspired ideas, and no doubt many readers will respond to the book, but one hopes that the author's future efforts will be packed with richer character development and less schmaltz. --Gisele Toueg
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