MacGregor Tells the World MACGREGOR WEST'S SHOE BOX IS FILLED WITH ISSUES--CHICAGO TRIBUNE By Lynna Williams MacGregor West is 22, endearing and damaged, a free-spirited citizen of San Francisco -- if free spirits have mother issues, abandonment issues and a long list of other issues, some with issues of their own. "MacGregor Tells the World," Elizabeth McKenzie's charmingly off-center first novel, follows Mac's unraveling of the mysteries of his mother's life and, especially, her drowning death in Paris after he was shipped off to his aunt in California at age 9. The search is perilous-- How much can a son bear to know? -- but necessary, because Mac's misery runs deep and wide: "When his socks weren't right, he felt restless and cursed. When miserable, he festered with images of people drowning, of oil spills spreading in the seas, of serial killers. . . . He worried that some form of recklessness or depravity lay sleeping like a wolf in every cell of his body. His mother had all but told him so." Before his quest begins in earnest, a short list of the best things in Mac's stalled life reads like this: "[E]ating tacos, drinking bourbon until he passed out, and turning the pages of a book his cousin's husband, Tim, had in the bathroom called Women of the Sud- Tyrol." The life Mac saves will definitely be his own. When his aunt sends him a shoe box filled with his mother's "loose ends," a stack of envelopes inside have the return address of a mansion in Pacific Heights. He's there one day, trying to summon the nerve to knock, when fate hands him a girl trapped in a rollaway bed. It's Carolyn Ware, older daughter of faded literary lion Charles Ware, and she recognizes Mac's stash of envelopes as her father's personal stationery. Carolyn's family is intact -- father, mother, sister -- but she has issues even Mac's issues haven't imagined yet. They bicker; Mac gives her a tip about a taco stand with free radishes; they kiss; something blooms in a guarded but semi-life-altering way. Carolyn will be Mac's entr?e, not just to a world of money and privilege but to his own longed-for history. "She was a princess!" Mac thinks after their meeting. "Could it really be happening? The daughter of Charles Ware? And had he forged a link between his mother and the known world?" He has. But the Ware family has secrets; each new discovery pushes him closer to the complicated truth and further away from believing in Carolyn as a lifeboat in his own sea of troubles. The novel's plot works off a series of revelations, each more unexpected than the last, and also slyly suggests that literary lions may be more teeth and mane than substance. It benefits, too, from some tart observations about money and culture in America, and Mac's obvious love affair with San Francisco. But it's MacGregor West's character, finally, that makes the novel work. What's not to love about a young man this alive to his own senses: "He snorted his upper lip to his nose, and it smelled like a Bacon Thin he'd eaten in third grade." "MacGregor Tells the World" is full of sharply observed detail and moments both comic and poignant, all of them courtesy of a special character's world view. "A couple of years ago, a first-time author in Santa Cruz came out with a thoroughly entertaining "novel in stories" called Stop That Girl. The first person protagonist was so vivid and real, with such an engaging sensibility, you almost felt she was alive and growing up somewhere in California. It's good to know Elizabeth McKenzie is still creating characters like that. This time we meet MacGregor West, an acerbic, deadpan guy who never knew who his father was and at 22 still has not come to grips with the mysterious death of his mother when he was 9. As the novel opens, he is approaching a home in Pacific Heights; its return address is on a batch of empty envelopes he recently found in a shoe box "full of his mother's loose ends", and his first clue in uncovering her past, and thus, his own. Here he meets another beguiling mess, Carolyn Ware, trapped in a fold-up bed by her much younger sister. So begins a tale that's part mystery, part coming of age love story, part whirlwind tour of San Francisco. The end..feels true to life for these real if severely quirky characters. More, please." "Elizabeth McKenzie's wonderful, winning and sympathetic novel frees you by enchanting you. Her hero, MacGregor West, glides around San Francisco, dappled in the liberal summer light of first love, wolfing tacos, suffering truths. When MacGregor begs his girlfriend not to freak out but to freak in--to stick by him and his dizzy, determined way of reckoning with the world, make sure you take his dare. You'll want to buy a drink for this kid and for the first-rate author who gave him to us." "Reading MacGregor Tells the World was like being kidnapped and carried off. I found myself peering into cryptic yet fully rendered lives and eavesdropping on delicious conversations...and completely unable, unwilling to tear myself away. Elizabeth McKenzie's writing spirited me away to a stunning denouement on a carefully crafted tide of wit and words that can only be described as irresistible." A LOVESICK BOOKWORM ATTEMPTS TO EXPOSE HIS FAMILY'S SCANDALS--SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE "MacGregor Tells the World," Elizabeth McKenzie's first novel, is a story for romantics. Its main character, 22-year-old MacGregor West, is a literature-loving lost soul whose mother has drowned herself in the Seine. MacGregor, or Mac, spends the book uncovering his scandalous family history while romancing a San Francisco heiress and teaching a little boy about great literature. Click here to purchase at Amazon.com Click here to purchase at Barnes and Noble Macgregor Tells the World |
|
Home | The Author | Acclaim | Q & A | News | Contact | Buy | Invite Elizabeth to your next book club meeting! | Myspace.com | Random House |
Official site for Elizabeth McKenzie's Stop
That Girl and MacGregor Tells the World
Fiction/Random House
website designed by b. hornblower
© 2007 Elizabeth McKenzie