Title: Waxwings
Author: Jonathan Raban
Rating:
4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pantheon
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0375410082
Pages: 282
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 17-23 September, 2007
Tom Janeway lives in Seattle with his wife Beth and their four-year-old son, Finn.
Tom is a middle-aged Englishman who teaches writing at the University of Washington;
Beth, somewhat younger, is an editor at GetAShack.com.
It's 1999 and the DotCom boom is raging.
Chick is an illegal immigrant from China, with a raging entrepreneurial streak,
who ends up wandering in and out of Tom's life.
Tom is perceptive enough to be an occasional commentator
on NPR's All Things Considered,
yet oblivious to the problems in his marriage,
and he's flabbergasted when Beth leaves him.
Worse still, through being in the wrong place at the wrong time,
he becomes a person of interest in the abduction of a child,
and he becomes a pariah when it's mentioned in a Stranger article.
Raban brings DotCom Seattle to life,
against a backdrop of the WTO riots,
the cancellation of the millenial New Year's celebration
after the arrest of a bomber at Port Angeles,
and other events that had slipped my mind.
Surprisingly few novels (to my knowledge)
have attempted to capture the computer culture of Seattle.
Only Douglas Coupland's Microserfs
and Daniel Oran's so-so Ulterior Motive
come to mind.
Tom is likeable and decent, yet exasperating in his obliviousness.
Beth, Finn, and Chick are all strongly realized characters.
Entertaining and perceptive, and one of the better novels set in Seattle.