CAMDEN, Maine - Earlier this year, Richard Russo bought an apartment in Boston. Flying to book events and to visit a daughter in London have made him a regular at Logan International, four hours from his rambling home overlooking Penobscot Bay. This way, he can catch a decent night's sleep before heading up the coast.
Although the decision was a practical one, it was lent an unexpected sweetness when Russo learned that the apartment was in a renovated glove-making factory. That bit of history sealed the deal.
Russo's grandfather had been a glove-cutter in the small town of Gloversville, in upstate New York's historic "leatherstocking district." Nowadays, you can't buy a glove in Gloversville, and his grandfather has been dead for 30 years. So to be able to buy such an apartment "seemed like some sort of validation of his dreams," Russo said. "I saw the possibility of closing the loop."
Coherence is what we do
Continuity means a lot to Russo, 59, who speaks in St. Paul on Oct. 7 for the Talking Volumes author series. His novels are complex stories set in the seemingly simple environment of small towns, bringing readers into several families, and within them, several generations. A character's actions never seem off-kilter, mostly because Russo establishes their motivations so thoroughly, sometimes to the point of a reader muttering, "All right, already."
Yet any impatience is offset by the experience of being presented with a fully formed narrative, an experience that Russo fears is on the wane.
Case in point: He saw the new Batman movie, "The Dark Knight," and was left shaking his head at what he found a stylish mess. "It doesn't track," he said. "Sure, B follows A, and C follows B, but A doesn't cause B. B doesn't cause C. Each scene is wonderfully crafted, but there's no coherence. And coherence is what we do, isn't it?"
Warming to the topic, Russo couldn't keep from pointing out the essential illogic in the movie's catchphrase, spoken by Heath Ledger's Joker, "Do I really look like a guy with a plan?"