In three comic novellas, three unlikely hero-narrators insist their respective ways into revisionist stories --- imagined or real --- of rescue, resistance and ironic retribution. Darkly funny and politically urgent, their clumsy, self-conscious if sincere attempts answer our absurdly sadistic recent civic despair with complex if almost, if not quite imaginable, empathy. In The Dairy of Anne Frank, a community college student’s spelling error inspires his adjunct writing instructor to stage an alternative theatrical pageant rehabilitating grammar and syntax, love and brain injury, biography and history. In Not Enemies, But Friends, another teacher simultaneously takes on liberal fatalism and the organized complacency which enables both the virtual and actual kidnapping of public education by right-wing fundamentalists. Finally, in Going Clearer, accidental exposure to a single if singular book on Scientology transforms an otherwise illiterate and uninitiated nobody into an avenging disciple of reason and humanity against coercion, hucksterism, superstition and the limits of his and perhaps our own collective imagination.
Author Tonkovich is a scholar and writing professor who reveals himself to be a mad-skilled wordsmith, outrageous story builder and keen but never haughty social commentator in this tri-novella bundle of reading that is so deep and wide that it deserves more than one re-read. One stops to jot down a clever line or a well-constructed pun but after a time there are just too many notes to keep. Bravo!
And can I admit that my rote-brain keep reading the title as the DIARY of Anne Frank, etc., until after I actually finished the entire book? This, in spite of Tonkovich clarifying the Ann Frank's DAIRY in the first novella.