An exceptionally moving and self-assured account of the odyssey of a young academic who sets off for South America to research the biography of an Uruguayan writer—and falls into a viper’s nest of deception and intrigue.
Graduate students (in the humanities, at least) aren’t usually noted for machinelike efficiency, but Omar Razaghi is ineffectual even by the low standards of academe. A doctoral candidate at the University of Kansas, Omar is the sort who can set an apartment aflame and fall into quicksand with equal ease—but he is a fair scholar who knows how to write. His dissertation on the South American novelist Jules Gund has won him a fellowship with a generous stipend and guarantee of publication—if he can secure authorization for the biography he plans to write. Unfortunately, Gund’s literary estate is controlled by his three heirs (a wife, a mistress, and a brother), who turned down Omar’s polite letter requesting authorization. The matter probably would have ended there were it not for Omar’s more forceful girlfriend Deirdre, who convinces him to get on a plane and confront the family directly. In Uruguay, he quickly discovers that the opposition is not unanimous: Gund’s brother Adam is quite happy to agree to the biography—provided that Omar smuggle a few jewels back to America for him. Gund’s mistress Arden also seems open to argument—maybe because she finds that she more and more enjoys having Omar around to argue with. Only Gund’s widow Caroline is adamantly opposed. Could her resistance have something to do with the circumstances of Gund’s suicide? Or the unpublished manuscript of Gund’s last novel that she may or may not have destroyed? Is there some other, more hidden reason? It seems like an awful lot of work just to get a stipend.
Witty, intelligent, engrossing: Cameron (Andorra, 1997, etc.) offers a leisurely and old-fashioned narrative that nonetheless moves directly to a surprising but credible end.