Wednesday, May 21, 2008

The Ha-ha

Just finished listening to the audiobook, The Ha-ha.

The ha-ha or sunken fence is a type of boundary to a garden, pleasure-ground, or park, designed not to interrupt the view and to be invisible until closely approached. The ha-ha consists of a trench, the inner side of which is vertical and faced with stone, with the outer slope face sloped and turfed - making it in effect a sunken fence or wall.

Cross section of a ha-ha fence.
First novel about a man badly scarred in Vietnam, and scarred by it, who at last begins recovery. Howard Kapostash can only grunt, so he carries a card explaining his condition: he is of normal intelligence but can't speak, read, or write. His emotional IQ has always lagged behind, however, and his war experiences have aggravated the problem. He's still vaguely in love with his high-school sweetheart, Sylvia, even though her life is one of incompetent motherhood and addiction. When Sylvia's sister forces her into rehab, Howard is pressed into taking care of Sylvia's nine-year-old son, Ryan, a surly, wounded, and uncommunicative child with whom Howard has only a passing relationship. Living with him now, though, in the house where Howard once lived with his own emotionally wounded parents, a father-son relationship begins to grow. They share the house, without intimacy or much cordiality, with a Vietnamese-American soup-maker, Laurel, and with the house painters Steve and Harrison, whom Howard calls Nit and Nat. Howard buys Ryan a baseball glove, takes him to the fights, attends his school play. Gradually, emotional barriers fall, and, as the rehab stretches into to weeks, the five become a family, for the first time caring for one another's well being. Howard, paterfamilias-like, even lends Harrison a suit to attend his father's funeral. Then Sylvia returns, a new lover in tow, and Howard, after years of disappointment and just weeks of hope, is reduced to a bearlike existence. He lashes out at the new couple in an effort to protect his young and his family, violence that brings him a brief sanitarium sojourn. But the tide has turned. Howard slowly regains his humanity, his emotional life begins unfolding, and his newfound family begins to come back together.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
my rating: 2.5 out of 5. honestly the synopsis on the backcover was much more interesting than how it was written. i did like the story line, which was why i borrowed the audiobook in the first place, but i suppose it just didn't rate high for me on readability, or rather, listenability.

i do like the metaphor, however, and do believe i have quite a few ha-ha's myself.

2 comments:

Brenya ☆彡 said...

It sounds interesting. I haven't read a book in awhile. Why do I have a feeling I'm falling behind on my hobbies? hahah

The Cretan Babaganoush said...

reply to kohana: all u need is a long commute. you'd b amazed how many audiobooks u can get in there. not to mention how much eyesight you've spared. :)