Wrack and Ruin: A Novel
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Average customer review:Product Description
An exhilarating comic satire with the quirky energy of The Wonder Boys and Sideways.
Lyndon Song, a renowned sculptor, has fled New York City to become a Brussels sprouts farmer in the small California town of Rosarita Bay. Lyndon has a brother, Woody, an indicted financier turned movie producer, and Woody has a plan, involving a golf-course resort on Lyndon's land and an aging kung-fu diva from Hong Kong with a mean kick and a meaner drinking problem.
A dreadlocked buddy with an artificial leg, a small plot of exceptionally lush marijuana, two field biologists studying western snowy plovers, a disgraced museum curator, and Lyndon's great love, the impulsive mayor of Rosarita Bay-these are only some of the complications in Lyndon and Woody's lives over one madcap Labor Day weekend.
Hilarious and philosophical, this many-hued novel about the landscape of contemporary "multicultural" America is critically acclaimed Don Lee's best book yet.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #369452 in Books
- Published on: 2008-04-17
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 336 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780393062328
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
The trick to reading Don Lee's wonderfully silly second novel (after Country of Origin and a story collection, Yellow) is to take nothing seriously, even when you should. The book concerns the eccentric sculptor-turned-brussels sprout farmer, Lyndon Song, and his estranged brother, Woody, an uptight Hollywood producer. Lyndon's refusal to sell his farmland to a golf course developer results in an unwelcome visit from his brother, who has been secretly hired by the developer. The author has corralled an array of misfits and minor characters-Lyndon's friend Juju, a philosophizing surfer with a prosthetic limb, and Yi Ling Ling, a has-been kung fu film star-to season the backdrop of the brothers' misadventures and muster up some drama and didactic spiritualism. The novel's best sections are lighthearted in their delivery, but hint at deeper substance and self-reflection. At times the author starts pulling too adamantly at readers' heartstrings, but before long he's back to slathering on the sarcasm. This novel thrives on unlikely unions, unseemly humor and happy endings while maintaining a constant examination of family and identity, in keeping with the themes of the author's previous book. (Apr.)
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From Booklist
The author of Yellow (2001) and Country of Origin (2004) delivers another warmly humorous take on identity in this entertaining novel featuring Lyndon Song, a sculptor turned brussels-sprouts farmer. In his youth, Lyndon made it to the top of the cutthroat art world in New York City but soon tired of the egos, politicking, and harsh criticism. He gave it all up to settle in Rosarita Bay, California, a sleepy, foggy town ideal for organic farming. But his low-key lifestyle is threatened when a developer decides to build a golf course and needs Lyndon’s land to complete his deal. Lyndon’s long-estranged brother, Woody, a disgraced financier turned movie producer, makes a secret deal with the developer to work on Lyndon, but their wild Labor Day weekend visit changes both of them in unforeseen ways. An eccentric cast of secondary characters, including a fading Hong Kong kung-fu star and a perpetually stoned surfer, adds to the merriment in a highly appealing novel that swerves ever so gracefully from rollicking humor to poignant moments of reflection. --Joanne Wilkinson
Review
Wrack and Ruin has an accidental elegance that is un-selfconscious and refreshing. (New York Times Book Review )
Customer Reviews
A Weekend to Remember
On the surface, "Wrack and Ruin" by Don Lee is a readable, funny, endearing story of one holiday weekend in coastal northern California. There is a confluence of personalities and relationships that gravitate, collide, then disperse. It is a snapshot of characters, illuminated with vivid back stories. There is an element of slapstick: practical jokes, pitfalls, ridiculous injuries. It would be easy to read this book in a day or so, enjoying every well placed word, then put it down and forget about it. But underlying the action and forward movement of the story are a stew of ideas, ideologies, and identities.
I love Brussels sprouts. I was totally charmed by the prominence of Brussels sprouts in Lee's story. I love stories that pull random imagery to carry a storyline. I learned a great deal from "Wrack and Ruin": about small organic farms, about the art world, about film production, about chocolate, about bartending, about saving endangered wetlands.
It has been several weeks since I finished reading "Wrack and Ruin". I almost can't imagine a harder book to review. If a novel could be explained as an exploration of identity - racial, national, sexual, etc. - this book seems almost to be an exploration of nonidentity: take away race, nation, gender, and what is left? What makes us do what we do and feel what we feel? We love, hate, create and destroy, and all those things spring out of places far deeper than skin color, language and genitalia.
What is lovely to me about "Wrack and Ruin" is how subtly Lee weaves profundity into his story. There are amazingly crafted sentences and paragraphs, that not only carry the story along, but also suggest that Lee is doing something more.
Part of the marketing campaign has it compared to popular "Dick-Lit" like "The Wonder Boys" by Michael Chabon or "Sideways" by Rex Pickett. But don't come at this book expecting it to be like some other author's work. Rather than suggest he falls under someone else's standard, Don Lee is an amazing author who it would be fairer to say, defines a standard. I look forward to reading Lee's previous books.
I really think this is a story that is more than the sum of its parts.
Over the top, but wonderfully so
Hopefully Woodrow Wilson Song has thought of producing a movie about the outrageous Labor Day weekend (of which he is a part) chronicled in Wrack and Ruin, the new novel by Don Lee. Such a movie just might give him the success he desperately seeks in his "second life" career.
Brothers Lyndon and Woodrow Song provide the principal stories with which others intersect in this story of second chapter lives. Each brother has started anew. Both are haunted by personal issues that have forced each to abandon his initial career path, with an additional layer of complexity added by their long estrangement, an estrangement precipitated by Woody's fall from grace.
The story takes place over a Labor Day weekend in the small California coastal town of Rosarita Bay. This is the community that has become Lyndon's home after abandoning his brief meteoric art career to become, of all things, a grower of organic Brussels sprouts. Despite the brief time period covered, we get to know the brothers well. In addition, we meet an array of other quirky and eccentric characters, each providing enough of a glimpse into his or her history to provide depth - and reasons to care.
In one sense, the story is quite over the top, with calamity after calamity occurring at a rate that is hard to believe. Yet, despite the incredible string of events, one eventually comes to realize that the coming together of all of these people, of all of these personal histories, could happen in no other fashion. This Labor Day weekend has become the perfect storm.
There are many moments of hilarity which serve to highlight absurdities (personal and corporate) that we see around us each and every day. There are also more reflective moments that punctuate the book, though these moments of reflection may actually occur in the midst of some pretty wild circumstances. It is a wild ride that is entertaining, outrageous, and insightful at the same time.
In the end, despite the devastation, destruction and ruin implied in the title, there are epiphanies and quiet personal victories that put the chaos in perspective. Life moves forward, all survive, some have grown, some have moved on to new adventures. It is a book well worth the suspension of disbelief so that the rapid fire sequence of incredible events does not detract from the personal journeys and transformations we hear about and experience.
And yes, Woody, this would make an entertaining movie...
A Comedy of Errors for Our Time
In his wonderful new novel, Don Lee has accomplished one of the most difficult forms of art: the farce. And he has done so with tremendous skill, pulling you into a vibrant and lush world where you can taste, smell, and feel everything around you. In short, it was the ultimate sensory experience. It was certainly hard to leave.
Perhaps fans of Shakespeare's comedies would enjoy this for it's a novel where you have to be willing to just let go, immerse yourself in a world of exaggeration and improbability. It is utterly hilarious and wacky--it's been a while since I laughed so hard reading a book--but what moved me, in the end, was its great tenderness, the way we stumble toward, and discover, love.

