Byers (Long for This World) offers a gloriously  expansive view of Depression-era America, from the easy extravagance of  the Boston Brahmins to hardscrabble rural life. At its core, this is the  story of Clyde Tombaugh, an unassuming Kansas farm kid who achieves  international fame for his discovery of Pluto. In addition to Clyde,  there is the Harvard crowd that precedes him at the Lowell Observatory  in Arizona: Alan Barber, a man of modest background who aspires to the  effortless grace of his wealthy colleague, Dick Morrow, and has a crush  on Dick's scholarly and daring girlfriend, Florence. Byers connects  Clyde's story with a number of riveting and eventually interlinking  subplots, among them an archeological dig run by the wealthy Felix  DuPrie, who has turned his back on the family business to try his hand  at unearthing dinosaur bones, and the touching tale of Edward Howe, a  former professional boxer who pines after his gorgeous and troubled  secretary, whose delusions are portrayed with an amazing sensitivity and  realism. Between the faultless storytelling and the juicy historical  hook, it looks like a hit.
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Percival's Planet: A Novel
Labels: Novels