Aloft

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出版者:Wheeler Publishing
作者:Chang-rae Lee
出品人:
页数:495
译者:
出版时间:2004-5
价格:77.00元
装帧:Hardcover
isbn号码:9781587246777
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图书标签:
  • 科幻
  • 太空歌剧
  • 冒险
  • 未来主义
  • 星际旅行
  • 人工智能
  • 机器人
  • 阴谋
  • 生存
  • 探索
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Book Description

Set on affluent Long Island, Aloft follows the life of a suburban, upper-middle-class man during a time of family crisis. Jerry Battle's favorite diversion is to fly his small plane over the neighboring towns and villages. When his daughter and her fiance arrive from Oregon to announce their marriage plans, he looks back on his life and faces his disengagement with it - his urge to fly solo - and the people he loves.

Amazon.com

Chang-Rae Lee, named by The New Yorker as one of its 20 writers for the 21st Century, has confirmed his place in that company with Aloft, a masterful treatment of a man coming to terms with his own disaffection. In two previous novels, Native Speaker and A Gesture Life, Lee, a Korean-American, writes of lives being not what they seem: in the first, the protagonist is an undercover agent; in the second, the two halves of Franklin Hata's life never quite come together. Both novels won numerous awards, including Best First Novel, the Hemingway PEN Award, the American Book Award and the Asian-American Literary Award, among others. In Aloft, Lee revisits alienation, a fractured family, mixed heritage and the quest for identity.

Jerry Battle, 59-year-old widower and father of two, retired from the family business--the unmistakably earthbound Battle Brothers Brick and Mortar--buys a small airplane because "From up here, a half mile above the Earth, everything looks perfect to me." All is not well below. Jerry knows it, saying

...the recurring fantasy of my life... is one of perfect continuous travel, this unending hop from one point to another, the pleasures found not in the singular marvels of any destination but in the constancy of serial arrivals and departures, and the comforting companion knowledge that you’ll never quite get intimate enough for any trouble to start brewing.

His view from aloft saves him from the gritty reality of the detritus of life--and from life itself.

This high-flyer must come to earth, however, when he finds that his daughter is newly pregnant, diagnosed with cancer, and refusing treatment; his son, who is running the company, has piled up enough debt that bankruptcy is imminent; and his father has gone missing from his assisted living facility. Jerry can no longer say, with impunity, "Jerry Battle hereby declines the Real." Lee takes us on great side trips into the pleasures of food and recreational sex; his wife Daisy's death; his longtime lover Rita's almost endless patience, weaving long, Miltonic sentences that start in one place and end up miles away--flights of fancy--trailing clouds of insight and poignancy. With Aloft Lee just keeps getting better.

                             --Valerie Ryan

From Publishers Weekly

Lee's third novel (after Native Speaker and A Gesture Life) approaches the problems of race and belonging in America from a new angle—the perspective of Jerry Battle, the semiretired patriarch of a well-off (and mostly white) Long Island family. Sensitive but emotionally detached, Jerry escapes by flying solo in his small plane even as he ponders his responsibilities to his loved ones: his irascible father, Hank, stewing in a retirement home; his son, Jack, rashly expanding the family landscaping business; Jerry's graduate student daughter, Theresa, engaged to Asian-American writer Paul and pregnant but ominously secretive; and Jerry's long-time Puerto Rican girlfriend, Rita, who has grown tired of two decades of aloofness and left him for a wealthy lawyer. Jack and Theresa's mother was Jerry's Korean-American wife, Daisy, who drowned in the swimming pool after a struggle with mental illness when Jack and Theresa were children, and Theresa's angry postcolonial take on ethnicity and exploitation is met by Jerry's slightly bewildered efforts to understand his place in a new America. Jerry's efforts to win back Rita, Theresa's failing health and Hank's rebellion against his confinement push the meandering narrative along, but the novel's real substance comes from the rich, circuitous paths of Jerry's thoughts—about family history and contemporary culture—as his family draws closer in a period of escalating crisis. Lee's poetic prose sits well in the mouth of this aging Italian-American whose sentences turn unexpected corners. Though it sometimes seems that Lee may be trying to embody too many aspects of 21st-century American life in these individuals, Jerry's humble and skeptical voice and Lee's genuine compassion for his compromised characters makes for a truly moving story about a modern family.

From The Washington Post's Book World /washingtonpost.com

Readers who felt they thoroughly knew the exact scope of the work of Chang-rae Lee, the precise dimensions of his talents, after reading his first two books, Native Speaker and A Gesture Life, will be in for a surprise when they pick up his new novel, Aloft. Gone is the tight focus on the Asian-American experience, the self-recriminating, hapless protagonists and the language dense as bamboo thickets. In their place stands an Italian-American narrator who, while still heavy with regrets, is basically too full of life-juice to languish, and who discloses his soul and the tumultuous events of his life in a rough and ready vernacular that is not, however, devoid of poetry.

Whether you find the new book a joyous revelation, an ascent in Lee's career, or a betrayal and a wrong turn depends, I think, on how much you had invested in him as a spokesman for a particular ethnic experience, and in how predictable you like your authors. I appreciate a writer who's not overzealously committed to any one ideology or group, who likes to confound expectations and who feels expansive enough in his spirit and ambitions to encompass not just his close kinsmen but the infamous Other. With Aloft, Chang-rae Lee proves himself just such a writer.

Jerry Battle -- the family name was originally Battaglia -- is a 59-year-old landscape contractor on Long Island, once head of Battle Brothers but now retired early, having inherited the business from his father, Hank, and passed it on to his own son, Jack. Jerry fritters away his golden days lazily, holding down a part-time desk at a travel agency and taking his small plane aloft whenever he can. Although he's worked hard all his life, he admits that his basic nature is one of sloughing off responsibilities, emotional and vocational. (He entered the family business lackadaisically, in deference to his domineering father, even though his teenage dream was to be a fighter pilot.) But Jerry's lifelong innate "disbelief in the real" has culminated in a messy present. His daughter, Theresa, a postmodern scholar who is intent on naming her first child Barthes, will no longer confide in Jerry, even though her own life is at a crisis. Jerry's wife-in-all-but-name, Rita Reyes, has recently ditched him. Papa Hank, immured in a nursing home, continues to tug cords of guilt. And son Jack seems to be running Battle Brothers into the ground. Additionally, a host of lesser characters make their own demands on Jerry.

While the real-time events of the novel fill only a few pivotal summer days (excluding a coda that takes place some months later), the book exhibits the same infolding and mixing of past and present as Lee's earlier works. For Lee and his protagonists, the Faulknerian motto about the inescapable past is the rule that, for better or worse, governs their lives. As we follow Jerry through his semi-chaotic vectorings around Long Island -- he crashes a party where Rita is prey to a rival lover, engages in some fisticuffs with a jealous fellow at the travel agency, and hunts for a father gone missing, among other pursuits -- we are treated to his reminiscences about his entire life, most important those concerning his wife, Daisy, the mother of Jack and Theresa, and her death. This blending and blurring of cause and effect lends this book some of the same sense of timelessness as Lee's earlier novels, although the events of the present are foregrounded more vividly here.

Jerry's language is perhaps the biggest difference between this book and Lee's first two. Both of the earlier books are also narrated in the first person, and their language reflects Conradian consciousnesses much more layered and tortured than Jerry's. Describing his father, Jerry observes, plainly but colorfully, "At the moment, he's dozing hard, his mouth laid open, unhinged, his eyes pinched up like something really, really hurts." Compare that to this formalized, elaborate description of the politician John Kwang from Native Speaker: "His warm-hued face was square, owing its shape to the eminence of his angular jaw, which carved out two perfect hollows on either side of his chin." Yet Jerry, relatively uneducated as he is, still summons up enough zesty bon mots and aper?us to complement the more roughly hewn passages. In fact, at times he veers dangerously close to sounding like a sophisticated John Barth protagonist -- say Fenwick Turner in Sabbatical. And it's at these rare awkward moments that the mask slips and reveals Lee the master craftsman.

Lee does not eschew all his old subjects. Daisy and Paul, Theresa's fiancé, are both Asian Americans, allowing Lee to offer new insights into the roles America affords non-Caucasians. And Lee's previously established preeminent theme -- in the midst of life we are in death -- forms the core of the book. On a pleasure cruise, a fatal heart attack strikes. During a nursing home meal, mortality intervenes. A swimming pool almost literally becomes a grave. And the book's very climax is the archetypical embodiment of the paradoxical relationship between life and death.

If I were to find any fault with this exuberant, satirical, rueful, redemptive tale, it would be in its governing metaphor of flight. Jerry's actual airtime occurs only at the start and end of the book, and despite some intermittent passages concerning a famous balloon aviator, the hobby seems almost tangential to the story. One can imagine excising the riff without grievously diminishing this story of one man's quest for honor and grace in the face of his own failings and the world's unyielding strictures.

                                Reviewed by Paul Di Filippo

From Booklist

At 59, Jerry Battle takes great comfort in the orderliness of the aerial view as he flies his small plane above Long Island, where his Italian American family has run a landscape business for generations, and the fact is, Jerry is always somewhat airborne. He suppresses his feelings, avoids confrontation, and, although he's physically present for his still-virile elderly father and his adult children, he is always out of reach. But gravity is a relentless force, and over the course of just a few months, Jerry is pulled inexorably into a snarl of family catastrophes, reaping the consequences of his indifference toward the family business, his inability to come to terms with his wife's death, and his failure to ask the woman he loves, Rita, to marry him, even though she essentially raised his son, Jack, whose questionable financial shenanigans will destroy the family business, and his daughter, Theresa, whose progressive views evaporate in the face of her cruel fate: she's diagnosed with cancer at the same time she gets pregnant. Lee follows the stunning A Gesture Life (1999) with a brilliant and candid parsing of the dynamics of a family of mixed heritage--Jerry's wife was Korean, as is Theresa's intended, and Rita is Puerto Rican--while simultaneously offering a ribald look at male sexuality, a charming celebration of the solace of good food, and a sagacious and bitingly funny critique of our times. There is no escape, Lee reminds us, no rising above. We have no choice but to cope with fleshy, chaotic, and bittersweet life right here on earth.

                            Donna Seaman

From AudioFile

Chang-Rae Lee is in Updike territory here, the Rabbit Angstrom beat. His Jerry Battle is a suburban guy who has skimmed over full comprehension of just about everything important in life: the death of his wife, his distance from his children, his longtime girlfriend's defection to a cruder, richer man, his father's raging against the night in his nursing place. Don Leslie has trouble with the long rhythm of Lee's sentences and can't find a likable voice for Jerry, choosing heaviness and anger when puzzlement or self-deprecation would have helped. Also, throughout, Leslie calls Jerry's daughter-in-law "Your-niece," which is seriously confusing until you understand it's "Eunice," and seriously distracting thereafter. A wonderful book, it deserves a less earth-bound interpretation. B.G.

Download Description

"Set on affluent Long Island, Aloft follows the life of a suburban, upper-middle-class man during a time of family crisis. Jerry Battle's favorite diversion is to fly his small plane over the neighboring towns and villages. When his daughter and her fiancé arrive from Oregon to announce their marriage plans, he looks back on his life and faces his disengagement with it-his urge to fly solo-and the people he loves. Chang-rae Lee burst on the scene with Native Speaker, which won numerous awards, including the PEN/Hemingway Award. His second novel, A Gesture Life, established him as one of the preeminent writers of his generation. Now, with Aloft, Lee has expanded his range and proves himself a master storyteller, able to observe his characters' flaws and weaknesses and, at the same time, celebrate their humanity. Aloft is an unforgettable portrait, filled with vitality and urgency, of a man who has secured his life's dreams but who must now figure out its meaning."

Book Dimension

length: (cm)23.6                 width:(cm)14.7

《启航》 一、 故事梗概: 《启航》是一部跨越时空、交织着个人成长、历史洪流与命运抗争的史诗般小说。故事的主人公,名叫林泽,是一个出身于普通家庭、怀揣着朴素梦想的青年。他的人生轨迹,如同大多数人一样,在岁月的河流中缓缓前行,然而,一系列突如其来的事件,将他推向了历史的浪潮之巅,迫使他直面前所未有的挑战与抉择。 故事的开端,林泽生活在一个宁静的小镇,他的生活被大学毕业、初入职场的迷茫,以及对未来爱情的憧憬所占据。然而,他身上潜藏着一种不为人知的使命感,以及对某种超越自身认知的事物的渴望。这种渴望,在一次偶然的机缘下,被一股神秘的力量所唤醒。这股力量,并非来自现实世界的物质层面,而是更深邃、更古老的某种存在。 随着故事的深入,林泽发现自己并非一个普通人。他被卷入了一个古老而庞大的秘密社群,这个社群肩负着守护世界平衡的重任。在这个社群中,他遇到了形形色色的人物:睿智而神秘的导师,身怀绝技的同伴,以及那些觊觎力量、试图打破平衡的黑暗势力。林泽需要在导师的引导下,学习和掌握那些隐藏在历史深处的知识与技能,他需要理解那些古老的预言,并找到自己在这个宏大棋局中的位置。 他的人生不再仅仅是个人情感的抒发,而是关乎整个世界的命运。他要学会驾驭潜藏在他体内的力量,理解那些超越常人理解的宇宙法则。这个过程充满了艰辛与痛苦,他会经历失败、迷茫、自我怀疑,甚至生死的考验。他需要在一次次挑战中成长,从一个懵懂的青年蜕变为一个肩负重任的守护者。 故事的另一条重要线索,是围绕着林泽与一位名叫“星辰”的女性角色的情感纠葛。星辰同样拥有着非凡的出身和不凡的经历,她与林泽一样,被卷入了这场命运的洪流。他们的相遇,是命运的安排,也是心灵的碰撞。在共同经历生死考验的过程中,他们产生了深厚的情感,这种情感成为了他们在黑暗中前行的力量,也成为了他们对抗邪恶的羁绊。然而,命运的残酷之处在于,他们的爱情之路并非一帆风顺,需要面对各种阻碍,甚至可能要以牺牲来成全彼此。 《启航》的故事舞台,随着林泽的成长而不断扩大。他将踏足古老的遗迹,穿梭于历史的长河,探索未知的领域。他会遇到那些影响着人类文明进程的重大事件,并在其中扮演关键角色。他需要利用自己的智慧和力量,去修正历史的偏差,去阻止那些可能导致世界毁灭的阴谋。 小说在结构上,采用了多线叙事的方式,将林泽的个人成长、与其他角色的互动、以及宏大的历史事件巧妙地交织在一起。每个章节都充满了悬念和惊喜,让读者沉浸其中,无法自拔。作者通过细腻的人物刻画,展现了角色内心的挣扎、成长与蜕变。同时,作者也巧妙地运用了象征和隐喻,赋予了故事更深层次的哲学思考。 二、 核心主题: 《启航》的核心主题围绕着“成长”、“责任”、“命运”与“选择”展开。 成长与蜕变: 林泽从一个普通青年,逐渐成长为一个能够肩负重任的守护者,这个过程是小说最主要的驱动力。他不仅在能力上得到了提升,更在精神层面经历了深刻的洗礼。他学会了担当,学会了牺牲,学会了在绝望中寻找希望。这种成长并非一蹴而就,而是伴随着无数的挫折和痛苦,最终才得以实现。 责任的觉醒: 最初,林泽或许只是被动地卷入事件,但随着他逐渐了解自己所处的境况和所肩负的使命,他开始主动承担起责任。他明白,有些事情,不是别人能替他做的,只有他自己才能去面对和解决。这种责任感,是他从凡人走向非凡的关键一步。 命运的抗争与选择: 小说并没有刻意强调“宿命论”。虽然存在着预言和古老的安排,但林泽和其他角色并非被动地接受命运的摆布。相反,他们通过自己的选择和努力,去影响甚至改变既定的命运。小说的精彩之处在于,它展现了在看似不可抗拒的命运面前,人类的意志力与选择所能产生的巨大能量。每一次的选择,都可能导向不同的结局,这使得故事充满了不确定性和张力。 光明与黑暗的永恒博弈: 故事的冲突,根植于光明与黑暗之间永恒的斗争。这种斗争,既体现在宏观的历史事件中,也体现在角色内心的挣扎上。林泽需要不断地在光明与黑暗之间做出抉择,他的每一次选择,都在为世界的未来走向做出贡献。 爱与牺牲: 林泽与星辰之间的情感,是小说中一道亮丽的风景线。他们的爱,不仅仅是浪漫的爱情,更是一种互相扶持、共同成长的力量。在面对巨大的危机时,他们会为了彼此、为了更大的目标而做出牺牲,这种牺牲精神,是小说情感力量的重要来源。 三、 艺术特色: 宏大的叙事格局: 《启航》并非局限于某个时代或某个地区,而是跨越了广阔的时空,将个人命运与宏大的历史背景紧密结合。故事的展开,如同波澜壮阔的画卷,展现了人类文明的进程,以及隐藏在历史深处的秘密。 细腻的人物塑造: 作者在刻画人物时,注重挖掘角色的内心世界。林泽的迷茫与成长,星辰的坚韧与温柔,导师的智慧与深沉,以及反派的野心与疯狂,都得到了生动的展现。读者能够感受到角色的喜怒哀乐,理解他们的动机,并为他们的命运而牵动。 悬念迭起的故事情节: 小说的情节设计充满了曲折和反转,每一个章节都为读者留下了悬念,激发他们继续阅读的兴趣。作者善于设置谜团,引导读者跟随主人公一同探索真相,这种“解谜”式的阅读体验,极大地增强了小说的吸引力。 丰富的想象力与深刻的寓意: 故事中融合了科幻、奇幻、历史等多种元素,展现了作者丰富的想象力。然而,这些元素并非空中楼阁,而是服务于对人类存在、道德选择、以及宇宙意义的深刻探讨。小说在引人入胜的故事之外,还蕴含着发人深省的寓意。 语言的张力与画面感: 作者的文字功底深厚,能够将宏大的场面描绘得气势磅礴,又能将细腻的情感刻画得丝丝入扣。语言富有张力,既有史诗般的厚重感,又不失现代小说的流畅与灵动,营造出强烈的画面感,让读者仿佛身临其境。 《启航》是一部能够触动人心的作品。它不仅仅是一个关于冒险和成长的故事,更是一次关于人生意义、命运抗争和选择的深刻探讨。它将带领读者进入一个充满未知与挑战的世界,同时,也引发读者对自身生命价值和未来方向的思考。

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