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The Physics of Sunset: A novel
 
 
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The Physics of Sunset: A novel [Hardcover]

Jane Vandenburgh (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 25, 1999
From the author hailed by Newsweek as "a writer of great daring and skill to match" comes a brilliant, wholly original novel about the freedoms and imprisonments of desire.

When "an active grief suddenly yawns open for no good reason in the middle of her life," Anna Bell-Shay finds herself inexorably drawn to Alec Baxter, a celebrated architect. Both are transplanted Easterners in a form of exile in Berkeley, an enclave they find something less than paradise.

Alec--intense, intellectual, Jewish, an admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis I. Kahn--advocates the beauty of orderly buildings as ardently as he upholds the structure of his marriage. Anna is a poet, self-effacing and calm, devoted to the elegance of language. Against a backdrop of California's signature disasters--earthquakes, floods, urban wildfire--Alec and Anna explore an unexpected, extramarital physical passion with a recklessness that threatens the balance of their carefully constructed lives.

The Physics of Sunset is a spellbinding and fearlessly accurate portrait of the complex erotics of modern married life.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

A novel that concerns adultery between a married Jewish architect and an almost-divorced poet--in Berkeley, no less--had better have a sense of humor about its subject. Fortunately, The Physics of Sunset does. Yes, Jane Vandenburgh populates her tale with characters named Alec and Gina and Carlo and Veronique; yes, they all have glamorous occupations such as poet and painter and experimental musician; and, yes, they dine at Chez Pannisse. But into the mix, the author stirs a bracing dollop of irony and not a little satire. Take, for example, this commentary on Berkeley life:
What one did in order to demonstrate that you were a successful Berkeley couple, Anna noticed, was manage to stay together long enough to get the family's portrait done by Elizabeth Smythe and therefore have irrefutable evidence.
And then there are the chapter titles--spiky little headings, such as "Technically Daylight" or "Suicide Haiku" or "Schmutz," that add a frisson of anticipation of what is to follow. What does follow is the history of two marriages, and the point where they intersect. Architect Alec Baxter and his wife, Gina, have entered a lull in their relationship; Gina, an artist, has become so involved in her latest venture, Video Family, that "her love for this project--she called it 'Bungalow'--was so intense, her love for her own family paled by comparison." Though Alec is proud of his wife and of her dedication, he is also beginning to think "vaguely of other women." Enter poet Anna Shay, a neighbor whose own marriage to her musician husband, Charlie, is on the rocks. Over a period of years, Alec and Anna--both East Coast transplants to Berkeley--are drawn to each other and finally into an affair that threatens to shatter the careful balance each has achieved in life. Though The Physics of Sunset is not a particularly long book, Vandenburgh doesn't rush Anna and Alec--or the reader--into this affair. Instead she carefully lays the groundwork, introducing us to her protagonists' pasts, to their friends and passions and preoccupations, before finally allowing them to indulge in some very kinky sexual adventuring. Indeed, one could describe this book as an erotic novel for intellectuals, for in between the graphic love scenes are meditations on subjects as diverse as physics, architecture, and ethnography. In her second novel, Jane Vandenburgh has taken an old subject and given it a uniquely imagined new twist. --Alix Wilber

From Publishers Weekly

Since her highly praised first novel, Failure to Zigzag, Vandenburgh has kept readers waiting a decade for this second effort. A smart, witty, sadly ironic novel about neighbors in Berkeley who become lovers, this is an even more elegantly crafted and perceptive work. Rich with intelligence and feeling, it explores (and often satirizes) such themes as women's search for self-realization, the pretentiousness of the California lifestyle, the nature of marriage; there are also meaningful reflections on the principles of architecture and the theories of physics. Vandenburgh introduces several upper-middle-class couples who live in a canyon in the hills, weaving a textured skein of West Coast domestic life before she focuses on the man and woman in this circle who will eventually recognize each other as fated lovers. Despite his assimilated name, successful architect Alec Baxter thinks in the Yiddish phrases of his Queens boyhood and suffers from the echt-Jewish fears, guilt and panic about the direction of his life. He is drawn to reticent, melancholy poet Anna Bell-Shays years before her divorce; his own emotional estrangement from his cold, self-absorbed artist wife brings them together in irresistible passion. Despite his emotional Jewish sensibility and her WASP reserve, their intellectual interests coalesce around the field of physics, a theme that Vandenburgh develops with subtle and convincing skill. Coming after her cool dissection of several couples' marriages and her wickedly acerbic portraits of the cultural scene, Vandenburgh's depiction, in the last third of the novel, of Anna and Alec's affair is searing and poignant. Intensely erotic, its transports are tinged with painAphysical and emotionalAand the knowledge of finality. In capturing a particular culture in the fragile environment of social and natural disorder (the 1989 earthquake and the 1991 wildfire occur during this time), Vandenburgh has also created a memorable portrait of fulfilled love and bereavement at its loss. Her compassion infuses this story with insight and grace.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Pantheon; First edition. edition (May 25, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679424830
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679424833
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,518,457 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
5 star:
 (12)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Shadows in the California sunshine, July 25, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Physics of Sunset: A novel (Hardcover)
"The Physics of Sunset" is a superbly written examination of an adulterous affair in Berkeley, California. Vandenburgh writes knowingly of the Golden State with a cranky, tender familiarity. She is equally deft at dissecting all the shifts and shimmerings that combine to make up a single human emotion. Her novel is constructed not chronologically, yet it's not circular either, perhaps angular. She takes seriously the book's underlying metaphor of physics--that the world is both chartable and predictable yet profoundly chaotic and unknowable--and this metaphor is woven into the lives of her two main characters, Alec, an architect married with two children, and Anna, a soon-to-be divorced poet with one child. The chapters alternate temporal perspectives and points of view, and there is in this structure a certain hopefulness, as if one could come to a weary situation with renewed freshness. (The ending illustrates this best.) At times Vandenburgh's characters seem to be masks or puppets standing in for disturbing archetypes of Man and Woman. Alec is forever "lumbering" or "striding" while Anna is "vanishing," "vague," "hesitating." "A woman acted inward," Vandenburgh writes, "taking whatever blows there were into the softness of her body, while a man might more easily go out and commit his hate upon the world." The book registers a kind of perpetual astonishment that men and women are different. How much more generously strong this fine novel would have been had it explored not fractious difference but the essential humanity of men and women, their common and fundamental fragility and worth. But the author keeps skin-close to her subjects, what she calls, distinguishing between the two, "the interior and the real world." (This brings to mind a stylistic quibble: it seems that on nearly every page Vandenburgh uses the word "actual" or "actually," as if to emphasize some distinction between the fictional and non-fictional aspects of our lives. I found this tic increasingly annoying.) This scrutiny yields some real gems. An early chapter entitled "Bodies At Rest," which juxtaposes to great effect Alec's heartbreak over a parent's death and the seismic breaking of a California earthquake, is one of the most moving pieces of writing I have read in a very long time. In the end, though, it is paradoxically a secondary character, Gina (Alec's wife), who turns out to be the most appealing and interesting person in the novel: someone who indeed has a reason to feel broken and yet forges on, believing passionately in her commitment to both Family and Art. I look forward to reading this author's next novel (please, though, no more ungainly words like "haptic," "cathected," or "eidetic"); this kind of writing offers rare vision into the deepest of our painfully human subtleties.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars This novel is overwritten and pretentious., July 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Physics of Sunset: A novel (Hardcover)
This novel is incredibly irritating. Pretentious and overwritten, it doesn't offer any insight into the human character, or even life in North Berkeley. Reading it, I felt like I knew Jane Vandenburgh well, and couldn't stand her. I bought the novel because I thought I would enjoy reading about Berkeley intellectuals, and because one reviewer mentioned incredibly graphic sex scenes. But the characters are filled with self-loathing, and it's easy to see why. The world of this woman's imagination is populated by weak-willed pseudo-intellectuals, and it turns your stomach to spend much time there. Unfortunately, for a novel like this to work, it usually helps to have a sense of humor - or at least a hint of irony (for example, I bet Martin Amis could have done a great job with this cast of characters.) This chick has neither. The plot revolves around a much-delayed adulterous affair between two ineffectual, over-educated, artsy-fartsy Berkeley types. Once these two finally screw, after years of eyeballing each other across dinner parties in the Berkeley hills, they are filled with fear. What a surprise. The sex scenes were, unfortunately, only a very small part of the novel, and didn't live up to the review I read, but at least they are not as dreadfully overwritten as the rest of the book. If Vandenburgh could write about the rest of life as directly as she writes about sex, she might be able to write a novel that wouldn't make you wince. --- Rhiannon Patterson
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Pretentious, tedious, takes itself too seriously., July 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Physics of Sunset: A novel (Hardcover)
"The Physics of Sunset" received a wonderful review in the San Francisco Chronicle, presumably because the author hails from Berkeley (the setting for the novel). Having lived in the Bay Area I was excited to read this book; raves about the sex scenes provided added inticement. However, I found the main characters to be absolutely unlikable. Alec spends most of his time brooding; what does Anna see in him? Anna is equally devoid of redeeming qualities. She's flighty, neurotic,indecisive...she made me cringe. The much-touted sex scenes fail to deliver, primarily because Vandenburgh describes the graphic details but fails to connect with the characters' passions. The author tries too hard to be poetic and ends up sounding pretentious and melodramatic. Her overwrought prose elicits responses ranging from irritation to boredom to laughter. She does the women of Berkeley a disservice.
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VERONIQUE CHAKRAVARTY GREW up in a little town in the south of France-she called it my veellawwge. Read the first page
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