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Hardcover Low Tide Book

ISBN: 0394544293

ISBN13: 9780394544298

Low Tide

No Synopsis Available.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Acceptable

$21.99
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Exquisite Minimalist Painting in Words

I stumbled upon a first edition of "Low Tide" languishing on a lower shelf in North Beach. Immediately drawn to the deep, swirling mauves and gothic typeface of its cover, I flipped the book over to discover the portrait in profile of a straight-back girl - Ms. Eberstadt - and Everything about this girl shrieked DEB!! DEB!! DEB!! And I was right; a lovely example of belles lettres is this thin volume of prose - quasi-autobiographical I suppose - and a wonderful evocation of the compressed, elite world she must live in.In brief, Jezebel, her protagonist, lives with her mother, who "...weaned her on stories of the Great Terrebonne, a teetering Third Empire house with dizzy cupolas," in the Louisiana swamp. By page two, it turns out that her Mum's got bats in her belfry, for she and Jezebel actually live on New York's Upper East Side in a brownstone with cocoa labels steamed off tins and arrayed on their kitchen walls like "hot fetishes." Eustacius - an addition to bearing a lovely name- is their illiterate Black manservant ("I reads between the lines") who "dishes out equal portions of gumbo and wisdom" in the absence of her effete father who ,she explains, has expatriated himself to Oxford, England's groves of academe. Precocious Jezebel is in love with Jem Chasm, the son of Prof. Chasm, who "grew up in hotel suites" with his mother, Bocanegra Chasem. After a passing fancy for a teacher at the Brearley School Jezebel turns all her attention to Jem and actually turns up at Oxford.Jem is as cruel and beautiful as Jezebel, and for 18 year olds they are pretty astoundingly jaded already. Jem has "more money than he knew what to do with," and so, evidentally, has she, but the money takes a back seat here to Jezebel's worshipful, idolatrous love for Jem, besides, money is filthy lucre in Ms. Eberstadt's worldview (unlike all those other 80s and 90s writers who write of nothing but), and she has, I suspect, like Eustacius, no patience for "bedizened spics showing up late for dinner." Yes, this is "heady stuff," and the plot is anything but linear. Jem, her love-object grew up on tramp steamers and trains and above all, in world-class hotels; sired by a doughty professor on the daughter of a Chiapan millionaire.To me this book is brilliant. I love Ms. Eberstadt's writing and I prefer "Low Tide to both "Daughters" and "Isaac's Devil's" because it is so pure, like the portrait of an artist as a young (wo)man. In telling a simple story she can bring in such understanding and she really knows her class from the inside out; she's an intellectual deb - a rara avis, indeed - and one with a conscience (read Daughters) and a vocabulary that won't stop and can be likened to something along the lines of a Jamesian amalgam of British and American English. She's adept at both description and metaphor without a jot of overdoing it. One of my faves. Would she publish another book soon!!!Notwithstanding Jezebel, Ebersta

An Exquisite Minimalist Painting in Words

I stumbled upon a first edition of "Low Tide" one rainy day in North Beach. Immediately drawn to the deep, swirling purples and gothic type of its cover, I flipped it over to find a classic portrait of a straight-back girl; Ms. Eberstadt, and Everything about this girl shrieked DEB!! DEB!! DEB!! And I was right: a lovely piece of belles lettres is this thin volume of prose loosely autobiographical, I suppose, and a wonderful evocation of the compressed, elite world she must live in. In brief Jezebel, her protagonist, lives with her mother, who "weaned her on stories of the Great Terrebonne, a teetering Third Empire house with dizzy cupolas..." in the Louisiana swamp, Ms. Eberstadt tells us on page one. By page two it turns out that her mum's got bats in her belfry, for she and Jezebel actually live in New York's Upper East side in a brownstone with cocoa labels steamed off tins and arrayed on their kitchen walls like "hot fetishes." Eustacius - in addition to bearing a lovely name - is their illiterate Black manservant ("I reads between the lines") who "dishes out equal portions of gumbo and wisdom" in the absence of her effete father who has expatriated himself to Oxford, England's groves of academe. Precocious Jezebel is in love with Jem Chasm, the son of Prof. Chasm, who "grew up in hotel suites " with his mother, Bocanegra. After a brief infatuation with a teacher at the Brearly School she turns all her attention to Jem and actually turns up at Oxford. Jem is as cruel and beautiful as Jezebel, and for 18 year olds they are pretty astoundingly jaded already. Jem had more money than he knew what to do with, and so obviously has she, but the money takes a backseat here to Jezebel's worshipful, idolatrous love for Jem, besides, money is filthy lucre in Ms. Eberstadt's worldview, unlike all these other 80s and 90s writers who speak of nothing but. Yes this is heady stuff, and the plot is anything but linear. Jem, her love-object grew up on steamers, trains, inside limousine and planes and above all in world-class hotels: sired by a doughty professor who married the daughter of a Chiapan Millionaire. To me this book is brilliant. I love Ms. Eberstadt's writing and I prefer "Low Tide" to both "Daughters" and "Isaac's Devils" because it is so pure. In telling a simple story she can bring in such understanding and she really knows her class from the inside out; she's an intellectual deb - a rara avis indeed - and one with a conscience (read Daughters) and a vocabulary that won't stop; with something along the lines of a Jamesian amalgam of British and American English, she's adept at both description and metaphor without a jot of overdoing it. One of my faves. Would she publish another book soon!Except Jezebel, her characters are sort of spectral forms and outlines of flesh and blood beings. They are as polished and poised as the world they inhabit, which adds to the overall sparceness of "Lo
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