Wouk has penned some phenomenal and vital work. Wouk wrote two separate stories, in two volumes each that I've read at least a half dozen times. While I have no problem calling all of his work solid masterpieces, the sprawling epics, Winds of War-885 pages, and its sequel, War and Remembrance-1042 pages, capture everything marvelous, inspiring, and heroic about America's greatest generation; the War Years.
Following that epic, Wouk wrote his second series, The Hope-704 pages, and The Glory-688 pages. Wouk, a great narrator of history, takes the reader through the saga of Israel, the tenuous peace to the war of 1948, and the remarkable accounting of the 6-Day War of 1967.
Wouk also won the Pulitzer for The Caine Mutiny, an amazing fictional work, massively successful Broadway play-The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, and later the movie, The Caine Mutiny, starring Humphrey Bogart, which garnered seven Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.
While a work of fiction, the subject matter is factual. The "hole" refers to the massive Superconducting Super Collider gouged into the earth in Waxahachie, Texas. The mechanism, intended to be the world's largest particle accelerator, something like the Large Hadron Collider in Cern, Switzerland, was a machine designed to confirm the Higgs-Boson particle, which I would try to explain but would fail miserably. It's very "science-y" and heavy in physics, far beyond my scope of understanding. The Supercollider project, canceled by Congressional budgetary cuts before its completion, sends a lead scientist and the main character, Guy Carpenter, on a different life trajectory.
However, the massive project returned to the forefront of American interest when China announced that upon learning that the Americans axed the project, they began construction of their own the next day. Now, decades later, they have won the race to Higgs-Boson discovery.
The announcement shocks the American science community and leaves them sitting second as global scientific leaders. It also concerns the American military when rumors of a "boson bomb" surface. If the Chinese could make the Higgs weaponized, the energy of the new particle would make conventional nuclear weapons seem like the bang child's cap gun.
The reader should find the plot is interesting enough. But, even though it does take a deep dive into advanced mathematics and the mundane bureaucracy of the American Congress, it's the narration that makes it engaging. Wouk's ability to meld the intricacies, the highs, lows, and pitfalls of marriage into a much larger issue holds the magic.
In my opinion, Wouk writes women, men, and their relationships so well that it's frightening. For example, the following excerpt has Carpenter (the MC) confiding to a Congresswoman who's recruited him to help skewer the Congressman who
killed the Supercollider project about a romance he (Carpenter) had with a female Chinese scientist studying with him in the USA.
Their dalliance, which occurred long before Carpenter married his current wife, remains an unrequited love. However, Carpenter's wife, Penny, aware of the past relationship, holds onto a streak of hot jealousy over the matter. The resurrection of the Higgs-Boson topic leads to revisiting that affair, and the drama of a love triangle ensues.
"..you can be real plausible, Guy and your tale of chaste first love and wet autumn leaves—well, I even believed that, sort of. But that platonic weekend in Shanghai, uh-uh. I tell you this as a friend and a woman. If you try it on that keen wife of yours, she'll gut you like a trout.."
A few chapters later, that Easter egg gets scrambled. Then, in the aftermath of Carpenter's utter foolishness, drunk and defeated, he confesses to his cat about Penny, who is all but out the door on him and their marriage.
".. I'll try, Sweeney, but it's hard. I've been gutted like a trout, kitty, like a goddamn trout.."
And it's not the fact the Carpenter falls on his sword. It's how Penny, his wife, welcomes her husband home, serves him cocktails before a favourite, lavish supper with sweet words and loving gestures, lulling him into dropping his guard, all the while sharpening the knives with which she skewers him to the wall after slicing through his thin excuses and weak lies.
Wouk makes that old saying, "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned," burn across the pages with such ferocity that you drop the book to avoid blistering your fingers.
"A Hole In Texas" isn't a Pulitzer contender, perhaps not even a NYT Bestseller, but at a mere 278 pages, it is a great read by a magnificent storyteller.