By Blood by Ellen Ullman 5/5 A fascinating human study on so many levels. The narrator, a disgraced professor, flees to San Francisco, trying to put some form back into his life. We only receive dribs and drabs of reasons for his disgrace throughout the novel, but it is of a stalking nature. He rents an office space in a rather run down section of town, that turns out to be next-door to a psychotherapist's office. With paper thin walls our narrator is able to hear every word that is said in the adjoining office. Thus begins the patient's story, we are not told names, we read neither the narrator's name, nor the patients. For good reason. This is a story of identity, how we as humans obtain our identity, it's source, how we can claim our own version of life. Whether we choose to take the path of least resistance, or not. Ullman has an almost Nabokovian way of leading the reader to relish our unsavory narrator's actions. To sympathize, even empathize with his struggles against his worse self, and a struggle it is, no doubt about it. His victories against his demons are actually stupendous, his defeats equally horrendous. Ullman describes in detail a man in agony, and despair. The author's physical descriptions of the office building's architecture, the very changeable weather of San Francisco are all rendered in a painterly, emotive style. The novel takes place in the mid 1970's, so many of the political events of the time are woven into the tale. The fall of Saigon, Patty Hurst's kidnapping and finally her arrest. We vividly feel the times, and they are disruptive, colorful and frankly, scary as hell. Highly Recommended.
I'm definitely looking for more of Ullman's books!