Book Review: In The Falling Snow
Book Reviewed by Thumper
I have heard of 
	Caryl Phillps. We have reviewed one of his 
	earlier novels for AALBC.com in the past, but I had not read anything by 
	him. Phillips’s latest novel, In the Falling Snow, may be 
	my first time reading the author, but it will not be the last. The novel is 
	about a man going through a mid life crisis whose life is in shambles. 
	Phillips writing is potent and fluid. While I love his writing style and the 
	layout of the story, I did not love everything about the novel, specifically 
	the main character. Conclusively, I came away from In the Falling Snow 
	happily impressed.
	
	Keith Gordon, a single divorced man in his late 40s, has been accused of 
	sexual harassment, on his job, by a woman he was dating. Keith was ordered 
	to take some time off while an investigation into the allegations was under 
	way. Now Keith can deal with issues in his life that previously did not have 
	his full and undivided attention: his ex-wife Annabelle and their teenage 
	son Laurie; and his strained relationship with his father Earl. There’s an 
	old commercial that uses the line, "Life is messy…clean it up". Keith will 
	either clean up the messes of his life or he can stand there, knee deep in 
	shit.
	
	In the Falling Snow is a wonderful book. As I stated 
	earlier, I had not read any of Caryl Phillips works before and I’m feeling a 
	little foolish about it. Phillips did more than create a storyline with a 
	few interesting characters; he produced a story that had a mood, a rhythm, 
	that was damn near hypnotic, as if John Coltrane’s saxophone blowing a 
	ballad was the soundtrack to a gray, cold winter city scene. I’ve always 
	loved gray winter days. Phillips wrote a drama that did not have grand 
	dramatic scenes with grand dramatic gestures instead there were small 
	decisions, in an average, everyday life that altered the stream of it. 
	
	Keith is the only character in the book that I did not understand or like. 
	Keith is weak and directionless, like a ship with no anchor. He had a ho-hum 
	attitude that was sickening. If I could have choked a turd out of him, I 
	would have. He just goes through life with no real ambition or goals, no 
	serious likes or dislikes. It’s as if Keith is a visitor to his own life. 
	Phillips earned a top grade with the character Annabelle, Keith’s ex wife. I 
	could feel her frustration with Keith. In all fairness to Keith, Phillips 
	drew sides and textures to Keith that let me know that there were hints 
	there is more to Keith than just a moving blob going through the motions.
	
	In the Falling Snow is a prime example of what my old 
	college literature professor would have put on our class reading list. The 
	novel shows that literature does not have to be sprinkled with $10 words or 
	complex sentences that take 15 minutes to break down in order to get a 
	thimble full of comprehension. In the Falling Snow is an 
	examination of human nature inside a beautifully written story.
	

