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THE CLARINET POLKA by Keith Maillard Kirkus Star

THE CLARINET POLKA

by Keith Maillard

Pub Date: March 1st, 2003
ISBN: 0-312-30889-2
Publisher: Dunne/St. Martin's

Vancouver-based Maillard returns to West Virginia, where he was born and bred, in this finely rendered account of a young man stranded in a hardscrabble mill town.

Raysburg (the setting of Maillard’s previous trilogy: Gloria, 2000, etc.) was a gritty place in the best of times—and the best of times were long over by 1969, when Jimmy Koprowski returned from the Army. He’d never got beyond Guam, where he repaired B-52s, so he’s not one of your shell-shocked Vietnam vets, then, but he’s still got problems. The steel mill in Rayburn closed down years ago and there’s little for an ambitious young man to do. Jimmy gets a job repairing TVs, but what he really wants is to head out to Texas for work in the burgeoning aeronautics industry. It’s not so easy to get away, though. Even if he had the cash to float himself for a few months (which he hasn’t), he would feel held back by the presence of Old Bullet Head (his father), his kid sister Linda, and his friends from the neighborhood (most as aimless as he is). And, just as Jimmy is finally working up the nerve to break loose, a further complication develops in the person of Connie, a wealthy married woman from the other side of town. Jimmy and she begin a torrid, obsessive affair (as for how obsessive, they often have to resort to makeshift venues like the back of Jimmy’s car for their trysts). Like many men in his stymied position, Jimmy is also drinking too much—way too much. But there’s some light at the end of the tunnel, being shone by Janice Dluwiecki. A friend of his sister’s, Janice starts out as an annoyance to Jimmy, but the two eventually fall in love. Can he get rid of Connie, stop drinking, and get on with his life?

Old-fashioned, rich in detail and incident, a story of marvelous skill and poignancy: Maillard is a national treasure.