No doubt many people have read Thoreau's Cape Cod and pledged to follow his footstepsAto walk from Eastham to Provincetown and then "make a book on Cape Cod." So you've got to admire Mulloney's tenacity, even if his version of his journey tends to be rather, well, pedestrian. A media affairs specialist with the Massachusetts Legislature, Mulloney isn't exactly a subtle writer ("Boom! Now there was a wave!" he observes, only minutes after another wave "ran up the shore and grabbed [him] around the ankles." He also has a penchant for hyperbole, though it could be his way of paying homage to Thoreau. Regardless, it's gratingAa look becomes "a gander" and the sun is either "that supreme luminary," "a ruby red circle shining through a veil of vapor" or "the hot star." It might help if he were consistent, but mixing modern slang with antiquated formal language (one minute he's going on about "a Munchkin-sized woman" and the next he's complaining about her "doleful mien") only highlights the problem. Mulloney's real strength is his knowledge of the Cape; he used to be a television reporter there, and his descriptions will resonate with anyone familiar with the region. He also offers insightful commentary on everything from development and environmental issues to local lingo (including the all-important distinction between locals and natives).
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From Library Journal
Any writer with the temerity to begin a first book with "It was a dark and stormy night..." deserves our attention for the remainder of the sentence, which continues "honest to God it was, that Ides of March eve of the fateful encounter." Mulloney has us hooked for the remainder of the paragraph, and from there it's an enjoyable sojourn to the end of the read. He is a television and radio reporter and also a media affairs specialist with the Massachusetts legislature?hardly the credentials one would expect of a person attempting a walk in Thoreau's footsteps on Cape Cod. But walk and write he does, observing with intelligence, appreciation, and wry good humor all that he discovers. One need not be familiar with Thoreau's classic Cape Cod to enjoy this contemporary journey. Mulloney has familiarized himself with local flora and fauna, in addition to absorbing the geology of this unusual landmass; he's a perceptive observer of the human condition as well. Recommended for most collections.?Janet N. Ross, Sparks Branch Lib., NV
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.







