This
week on “Books du Jour,” our guests gather around a table at City
Winery to discuss the scent of their new book and share some musing.
One of the most interesting aspects about scents is that they are always intimately tied
to a location and more particularly to soils. Our three guests carry a
distinctive sense of place.
Mark Slouka, “Brewster,” writes about Brewster, NY, a poignant novel of coming of age, based in the late 60s’, about a young man seeking his place in this small country town. There is little wandering outside the borders.
Lara Vapnyar
complicates the issue of identity by straddling two continents and two
time frames. Her “Scent of Pine,” moves back and forth between the
outskirts of Moscow and the countryside of Maine.
Edmund White,
on the other hand, with “Inside a Pearl,” which refers to Paris, the
French capital, continues his peripatetic wandering through the French
cultural corridors. His sense of place is about relocation and shifting
identity.
The Books du Jour and Book Case Teams
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