Tuesday, September 11, 2018

MEMENTO PARK




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Memento Park, Mark Sarvas, Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2018, 271 pp
 
 
I read this novel because Mark Sarvas used to have a wonderful literary blog called The Elegant Variation. It was one of the first blogs I followed back when book blogging was a new fresh thing and a big deal. He inspired me to start my own blog.
 
Memento Park is the story of a 21st century man descended from Hungarian Jews. Matt Santos is a B-list actor. He has steady work doing bit parts on TV shows and is engaged to a beautiful, not Jewish, blonde fashion model. Then a painting comes into his life, a masterpiece by a deceased Hungarian modernist believed to have been looted from Matt's parents' home in Budapest during WWII.

Like a wish granted in a fairytale, the painting could make him a rich man but brings with it a curse. Matt has a fractured relationship with his father, a distant connection with his mother, and a deep aversion to his family's past.

In truly beautiful prose layered with the contemporary glib conversations of Hollywood, Matt's journey to acceptance and awareness unfolds. On his journey he loses almost everything: his fiancee, his job and very nearly his sanity. Though there are scenes of levity and wit, a darkly emotional atmosphere wraps this tale.

Somehow I never tire of stories where a secret and murky past involving immigrants who deny that past in order to make a good life in America, comes back to haunt their children. When the story is written as masterfully as Memento Park is, I feel honored just having read it.

Last night I met Mark Sarvas in person for the first time at a writer's event held in the Echo Park branch of 826LA, where he read a passage from the book. He is a husband and father now, he teaches novel writing at UCLA, and has moved on from blogging.

I got to tell him how much I loved his novel and why. He thanked me several times for coming out but seemed conflicted about being in the public eye. He is at work on a new novel that he said harks back to the comedic mode of his first novel, Harry, Revised, which I never read. I was a fan of his blog and now I am a fan of his fiction. I will read the first novel while I await the third.


(Memento Park is available in hardcover by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)

10 comments:

  1. Sounds like an awesome read! It's wonderful meeting an author in person at an author event... Especially an author you've admired for years!

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    1. It was really special to meet Mark!

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    2. Thanks so much for your kindness and enthusiasm, Judy. It was very nice to meet you, I was so touched that you came out. I'm hard at work on book three! Best wishes!

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    3. Ah Mark! Thanks for stopping and commenting!

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  2. Wow good for you Judy to go and meet the author! Wonderful to hear the passages read and hear his thoughts about it. I had my eye on this novel in one of my monthly previews, so it's good to hear you liked it. I hope to get to it.

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    1. I remember seeing the cover in your preview. I hope you like it as much as I did.

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  3. Sounds like you've found another winner. And how nice to see someone who started as a blogger succeeding in writing literary fiction. It's great that you had a chance to meet him.

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    1. I am quite happy for his success!

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  4. How cool that you admired him, followed his blog and finally met him in person! And he left a comment too! :-) Nice, Judy. Glad you enjoyed this one. I'm not crazy about the cover though.

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    1. It was all very cool. I felt not crazy about the cover myself but after reading the story I see that it is made up fragments from a modernist painting. It fits.

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