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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An engaging and incredibly touching novel, February 8, 2007
Gayle Brandeis, winner of the Bellwether Prize for Fiction in Support of a Literature of Social Change (THE BOOK OF DEAD BIRDS), has penned another novel that is both engaging as a story and timely in subject matter. In it, she expertly flings a cartload of characters searching for love, security and identity into a melting pot infused with political upheaval, fear and post-9/11 muck. The result is a book that is both chaotic and solid, frightening and incredibly touching.
Aptly titled SELF STORAGE, the narrative focuses on the business of the self and how we as humans store the "stuff" that makes up both our inner core and our external appearance, using Walt Whitman's gorgeous LEAVES OF GRASS/"Song of Myself" as its guide. All the main characters struggle valiantly with this process --- some successful, others not --- in order to define what of themselves is private and what can be shared openly with others. The book also addresses identity on a larger scale, and confronts both how we relate to others in our surrounding communities and how we receive and are perceived in the world. Given that the story takes place in our contemporary, war-torn world, the white characters have a much more carefree, privileged outlook on life and its prospects, while the Arabs are relegated to prejudicial treatment, confinement and secrecy.
In brief, SELF STORAGE is a post-gloom-and-doom/pre-sorted out tale of two families thrown together just months after the Twin Towers' demise. Twenty-eight-year-old Flan (Flannery) Parker, her husband (Shae) and two young children (Nori and Noodle) are barely scraping by in their shoddy university housing complex in Riverside, California. Flan makes her living buying booty from auctions and unclaimed storage units and reselling it on eBay or at garage sales, while Shae fumbles away at his hopelessly pretentious dissertation ("Hands on the Joystick: Televisual Abstractionism and the Postnarrative Origins of Virtual Selfhood"). The Parkers sleep together in one room, mattresses strewn across the floor --- a symbol, perhaps, of their slim grasp on security and lack of incentive to do anything about it (without any real consequences).
Meanwhile, their neighbors live an entirely different existence. Émigrés from Afghanistan, the Suleimans barely leave their house; when they do, they are shrouded in what seems like a veil of mystery --- most likely brought on by Mrs. Suleiman's (Sodaba's) burqa. They don't participate in the housing complex's dinner gatherings, rarely look any of their neighbors in the eye, and basically keep their strict traditions and their opinions to themselves for fear of persecution. But when a near-fatal accident occurs (Sodaba accidentally runs over Flan's youngest child, Nori), pitting Flan and Sodaba together on opposite sides of a near-homicide investigation, the two women (and their cultures) become connected in a way never thought possible.
At times, Flan's mission to "save" Sodaba from almost-definite deportation after the accident by driving her to a friend's house in the woods seems a bit too pie-in-the-sky. Some readers might question Flan's altruistic motives and her willingness to put her family on the line in order to save a virtual stranger (especially one who ran over her child), despite Brandeis's efforts to convince us otherwise. Nevertheless, this dilemma raises weighty questions about how far one might be willing to go to help another human being, despite his or her differences.
Above all, SELF STORAGE is an in-depth (if slightly scattered) study of persons displaced --- within themselves, with their neighbors and in the world at large --- and of their gallant efforts to find their way home. Brandeis's emphasis on Whitman's sentiments and the gorgeous selections from "Song of Myself" sprinkled throughout are a gift, and readers will delight in the pages of poetic excerpts included at the end.
--- Reviewed by Alexis Burling
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Falls a bit short, July 17, 2007
This novel did a good job of capturing the American climate in the post 9-11 world. The instant suspicions of the others living in the graduate housing due to their neighbors' obvious Afghan origins rang very true. It seems that after that tragic day merely being Arabic makes a person instantly suspect, much like merely being Japanese made people instantly suspect during World War II. Brandeis does a nice job of pointing out how quickly we resort to prejudice due to a sort of paranoia caused by a tragedy of such epic scale.
Some of the plotting, however, was a real stretch and some things were left rather unfinished. I would have liked to see more development of the relationship between the main character and her Afghani neighbor. I'm also not quite sure I bought the reconciliation between husband and wife at the end as it seems to me that their marital problems were far too deeply rooted for such swift resolution.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Inspiring, March 10, 2007
This book is a remarkable achievement. Brandeis's engaging, unassuming style drew me into what seemed at first to be a clever romantic comedy--and before I knew it, I was deeply involved with both the characters and the deeper moral issues she introduces in a convincing, personal way that never betrays the reality of the characters or setting. This is both a fascinating account of a woman's journey of self-discovery and an exploration of what it means to be American and, finally, human. It is inspiring and uplifting without being in the least sentimental--and it's great fun to read.
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