Nancy Horan's Loving Frank (Ballantine Books,
$23.95), which has had marvelous press coverage on NPR and in TheNew York Times, deserves the praise. A novel of ideas combined
with an intricate tale of the emotional turbulence of a great and
greatly inconvenient love affair, not to mention an ending so shocking
and horrifying that I couldn't sleep after I read it, Loving
Frank tells the story of Mameh Borthwick Cheney. A highly educated
yet proper middle-class woman in Chicago, Mameh falls for brilliant
architect Frank Lloyd Wright when he builds a house for her and
her husband. The internal struggles – as Mameh tries to deal
with loving her children yet staying true to herself and her love
for Frank – explode into international scandal. Based on years
of rigorous research, Horan's book shows off her remarkable writing
skill and ability to intelligently narrate this gripping tale.
The lives of Mameh and Frank touch upon the history
of art, architecture, suburbanization, anthroposophy, spiritualism,
feminism and suffrage as well as the fine shades of emotion surrounding
motherhood, adultery, desire and intellectual fulfillment. Horan,
a journalist, became fascinated by living in the same neighborhood
as the Cheney house, and her passion shows. Those who have studied
Wright — whose building ideas, brilliant and grandiose, not
to mention impractical in engineering terms, electrified American
architecture — will appreciate the portrait of him, but anyone
interested in human relationships should appreciate this well-crafted,
finely considered work of art.
Nancy Horan reads from Loving Frank at 7:30
pm on Wednesday, Aug. 22, at Powell's City of Books in Portland.
— Suzi Steffen
BOOK NOTES:
Christine Harold reads from OurSpace: Resisting the Corporate
Control of Culture, 7:30 pm 8/16, Powell's on Burnside, Portland.
Writers' Fair: Bart King (The Big Book of Boy Stuff),
Linda Swanson-Davies (Glimmer Train) and Joe Blakely
(Lifting Oregon Out of the Mud) offer info and advice, 1
pm-4 pm 8/19, Downtown Library. Stuart Cowan discusses the
10th anniversary edition of Ecological Design, 7 pm 8/20,
Powell's Technical Books, Portland. Jeff Parker reads from
Ovenman, 6 pm 8/30, Mississippi Pizza Pub, Portland. Kate
Schtaz reads from Rid of Me: A Story, 7:30 pm 8/30, Powell's
on Hawthorne, Portland.