Ten things to love about The Heart of Henry Quantum
#1 Henry – What a wonderful character. A mashup of Jimmy Stewart, Leopold Bloom, and Walter Mitty, Henry is a person who cannot keep his mind on the task at hand, much as he tries. His mind has a mind of its own. It cycles from the present moment, to memories, to stray facts drawn from popular science, a topic of which Henry is particularly fond, to overdue obligations, and back to the present moment in an endless journey that never quite arrives anywhere on schedule. But at the center of this maelstrom is a person who truly means well, wants the best for everyone, couldn’t hurt a fly, except by accident. And for Henry, accidents do happen. You want him to do well, to be rescued, because he deserves to have life turn out better than it has. But above all, you just want him to keep being Henry, because it is so entertaining to ride through San Francisco inside his meandering mind.
#2 San Francisco - To a person who came to San Francisco as an adult (which covers a lot of the people actually living here, I think) Henry’s city by the bay is deeply recognizable. It’s a comfortable place, where the worst thing about it is that sometimes you don’t get enough bad weather to keep the sprinklers running. Pepper so captures how this city still manages to feel small even as it keeps growing more packed and cosmopolitan. The locations ticked off by the characters as they go about their rounds may sound too minor or odd to be mentioned, and yet they are in fact the true landmarks of life as a local, or at least a north side, white, middle-aged, Marin-loving local. Café de la presse, the Prada on Maiden Lane (to pass by, not to go in), Tam Junction, Lake Lagunitas, Stinson Beach and on and on. Bravo, Pepper, you nailed it.
#3 The Advertising Business - So dead on, at least to my ear. An amazing collection of misfits, engaged in turning products of dubious value into objects of desire, or sources of comfort and reassurance. The most creative people in the population, struggling to draw attention to these mundane objects by endowing them with qualities they do not in any objective way possess. The endless series of meetings, the sense of always being on the edge of disaster, the kicking of the creative can down the road. It’s all there for you.
#4 Bright moments of comedy – Folks, I should have mentioned. This is a love story. And a comedy. Bad things threaten to happen, and some do. But you just know you are not headed for any Dostevsky-esque ending here. And along the way there are some wonderful interactions among the humans that just might make you laugh out loud. My favorite is the piece where a cop surprises one of our two heroines as she has stopped the car to re-examine her life, and unfortunately chosen a no-parking zone. Wait for it, I won’t spoil it any further. And there were several other contenders for best laugh out loud moment. A lot of those are just conversations Henry is having with himself.
#5 Its short, with large type and lots of space – I remember reading books as a kid, I could start one after school, and turn the last page before turning out the light that night to go to sleep, if I really loved the book. H of HQ is like that. You could consume it all in one go, like on the plane visiting relatives for the holidays, or when you get a free afternoon/evening some weekend. Or traveling out to San Francisco. Or, as I did, grab a chapter or five every few days over the course of a couple weeks. It’s a book that makes you want to keep reading.
#6 The role of ‘science’ – A lot of times science is absent from current fiction, or shows up as a heavy-handed metaphor of some sort, or just takes over the book, like some of David Mitchell’s stuff (no offense, I like some of that). Henry is an enthusiast when it comes to science, so here science is entertainment. It’s just fun crazy stuff that works as a lens through which Henry considers life, from moment to moment. But its all grounded in the real thing. I think.
#7 Inside Henry’s head – the creation of a wandering stream of consciousness. I really love the way Pepper created the feeling of being inside Henry’s head. It’s not first person, there is distance. And yet you are very close to the experience Henry is having as his mind moves. It’s familiar, since we can all be space cadets from time to time, but raised up by a couple of powers without losing plausibility.
#8 Redemption – That’s all I’ll say, for fear of spoiling anything.
#9 Sex from a surprising source - Ditto
#10 Henry Quantum - I’m not sure how s/he did it, but Pepper has created a voice I hope to hear again. Hopefully, whatever good comes between where we leave him and Henry’s next adventure will not change his fundamental, loopy self, and I’ll once again get to ride along.