In the second book of the author's Last Hundred Years trilogy, Smiley spins an absolutely masterful tale, continuing the story of the Langdon/Vogel families begun in Some Luck. Sprawling doesn't even begin to describe the cast of characters; thank heavens there is a genealogical chart in the front of the book to help me keep track of who's who.
I enjoyed the first novel, Some Luck,set in Iowa farm country, which tells the early story of the family, beginning after WW1, continuing to 1952. So deftly does Smiley recount the difficulties and the realities of farm life that I was shocked to learn (heard her speak at a local bookstore) that her only knowledge of the industry comes from reading the Des Moines Register! Obviously her great talents as an author take over and enable her to create magic out of that knowledge to weave an incredibly realistic tale about life on the farm. Walter and his wife Rosanna settle down to the task of raising a large family while attempting to hang on to the farm during the depression. After reading the first novel I came away with a much deeper appreciation for farmers and more importantly for farmers' wives, for their role is certainly not an easy one. Here is an insight into Rosanna (said of an older Rosanna in Early Warning): "Death was a fact and no one knew that better than an old lady on a farm." The life is not for the faint of heart, for sure.
In the second book Early Warning, the story continues and as the Langdon children grow up, they leave the farm and settle all over the country, marrying, having babies, divorcing, growing old, getting sick, engaging in covert government activities, you name it, they do it. In fact, the brilliance of these novels, particularly Early Warning, is just how ingeniously Smiley has managed to weave just about every major historical event into the lives of her characters. World War II, the McCarthy era, Vietnam, Watergate, mass suicide at Jim Jones camp, the AIDS epidemic, the banking and loan scandal of the early 80s, it is all there.
Not everyone leaves the farm though. Joe, the second son of Walter and Rosanna, chooses to stay behind and his character reveals just what the pull is. His thoughts after he learns that the farm land has become quite valuable" Dollars were like drops of mist, they fluttered around you and dissipated. The real mystery was how your farm bound you to it, so tightly that you would pay any price, literally, in interest or make any sacrifice just to take these steps across this familiarly undulating ground time and again."
The Langdon family is not all that extraordinary when you get right down to it. They are just regular people, living out their sometimes simple, sometimes complicated lives against the backdrop of the tumultuous years of 20th century America, through 1986. The third novel, which will take us through to present time, is due out this October. I can't wait.