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This Side of Brightness [Paperback]

COLUM MCCANN
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)

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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Work Aug 20 2002
Format:Hardcover
Colum McCann has written a beautiful book with his work, "This Side of Brightness". Beautiful in this case may seem odd, but I would use the word here as I would use it to describe a work by John Steinbeck. Human nature and behavior often has trouble rising above decent much less beautiful, but a talented writer can bring painful lives and experiences to paper in prose that is wonderful to read. The pain that is documented is not minimized, rather written in a way that allows the truth to remain unvarnished, and the prose to be rendered by an artist like Mr. McCann.

I have read about the men who dug the excavations for the caissons of the Brooklyn Bridge, but never for the hundreds of miles of tunnels throughout the boroughs of New York. Tunneling is an extremely dangerous occupation, and if possible is even more hazardous when tunneling under water. The men must work in highly pressurized rooms in order to keep the river from collapsing in upon them, and yet the pressure cannot be so great that the air violates the walls of the chamber blowing outward as opposed to being crushed. The book documents a true story of men that were literally pushed through the walls of the tunnel they were digging until ejected in to the river and then being blown out of the water. To live through such an experience has to rank with the most remarkable stories of survival.

The book shares two lives that are revealed in parallel as far as narrative, but are intertwined in practice. The lives of both men are occupied at various times by living/working underground, but ultimately one life is spent and finally ends beneath the river, while for the other it is a refuge that ultimately allows him to emerge once again to life above ground leaving his demons buried.

The author also explores prejudice in a variety of forms, and from the book's very beginning shows prejudice and racism for the absolute stupidity it is. Men of various color and ethnic backgrounds enter a vicious working environment where they not only work together but are willing to risk their lives for each other. Black, white, Irish, Italian, Polish, none of these characteristics have any meaning when below ground, once returned to the surface every vile behavior associated with race, and religion once again is in full blossom. Church leaders reinforce the worst and most ignorant tenets of institutional stupidity; de facto Jim Crow rules dehumanize its victims.

Colum McCann does not shy away from any topic of traditional controversy. He takes the reader through generations of a family begun by a white wife and her black husband, their children who are born in to a world that hates them even more than their all black father, if that is possible.

There is one issue I am unclear on and it stems from a quote on the jacket of the book. Frank McCourt writes of McCann's, "having been there", when he writes about homeless living under the city. My question is whether the author did live there for a time while writing this book, or whether he actually was homeless for a period of time. In either event it took courage to live there as an observer, and if the latter, both courage and a willingness to share a desperately difficult and personal part of his life.

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3.0 out of 5 stars A (Mediocre) Message of Redemption April 15 2010
By Jeffrey Swystun TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
I became aware of this author through the hype for Let the Great World Spin. Before reading that work I decided to go back to McCann's earlier work and so read This Side of Brightness. I love fiction and nonfiction that covers the history of New York. I read Lethem, Carver, DeLillo, Cheever, Hamill, L.J. David and Carr. The stories that are set in 1946-1965 are especially appealing.

This work from McCann should have hit on my wants and needs. It covers four generations from 1916 to approximately 1980 but seems rushed as though the author wanted to rid himself of the characters he created. I did enjoy the history and fiction weave especially the glimpses he provides into the lives of sandhogs and those who work on skyscrapers. However, the plot and its message of redemption was not at all subtle (along with imagery of darkness and light). The last few pages seemed like an attempt to explain why the book was written. Still enjoyable enough and I plan to give him another try with Let the Great World Spin.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Genius Aug 4 2002
Format:Hardcover
This is a work of genius -- controlled and yet amazing to read. It's like Ondaatje and Berger together. Wonderful.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Among the finest I have ever read
After reading this depth of history, this understanding of New York, and especially this dialogue, it is very difficult to believe that the author is not a native New Yorker, much... Read more
Published on Sep 24 2001 by Lois Wingerson
3.0 out of 5 stars Definitely not a "feel good" story
I was really looking forward to reading this book as I had thought it was about the lives of "sandhogs" who dug the tunnels under New York at the turn of the century. Read more
Published on Aug 29 2001 by Tony S
5.0 out of 5 stars Most Recommended Book
I LOVE THIS BOOK! I just had to get that out of the way. The story is intense and visceral. The characters are so well developed that you are completely drawn into their world,... Read more
Published on Jun 13 2001 by M. Phillips
3.0 out of 5 stars Didn't live up to its potential
This book is quite mysterious and intriguing, yet in the final analysis something seems to be missing. Read more
Published on Mar 7 2000 by Gail Dohrmann
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Book
As an African-American reader from New York (who read this book as part of a college course) I find that it was a searing portayal of family life and inter-racial relationships. Read more
Published on Jan 25 2000
2.0 out of 5 stars Over-rated
The prose is turgid and laboured. A real slog and not the shining prose people talk about. The PR for this writer is better then the prose. Sorry
Published on Jan 10 2000
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, moving story of one family in New York
I was overwhelmed with emotion at the beauty of this novel. I had never heard of the book before someone mentioned it on the internet and I"m certain it will become a huge... Read more
Published on Dec 20 1999 by Alan Scheer
2.0 out of 5 stars Reach exceeds grasp
The author is clearly a talented writer, but this is not a fully realized novel. MCCann seems to be reaching.... Maybe next time.
Published on Dec 13 1999
4.0 out of 5 stars Good book group material
I came upon this book inadvertently during some surfing on Amazon. I was intrigued by the reviews & ordered it. Read more
Published on Dec 6 1999
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful & emotionally wrought, with incredible characters
This is a provocative, rich novel. Living only blocks away from the tunnels in Riverside Park, where many of the characters make their home, I was astonished at they way the author... Read more
Published on Nov 7 1999
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