The New York Observer, May 8th, 2007
FALLING MANBy Don DeLillo Scribner, 256 pages, $26
Don DeLillo already owned the Twin Towersâin 1997, he chose for the cover of Underworld a haunting Kertesz photograph of the World Trade Center looming in the murk, disappearing up into cloud, a soaring pigeon standing in for a hijacked airliner. And he owned terrorism, which he put at the heart of three novels, Players (1977), The Names (1982) and Mao II (1991). And he owned conspiracy, imagining in Libra (1988)âin encyclopedic detailâthe plot that led to the assassination of J.F.K. Now, with his new novel, the extraordinary Falling Man, he has exercised his right of ownership and stamped his name on 9/11: He has written a powerful and direct account of the atrocity and its aftermath.
He owns it, of course, only in the sense that heâs taken an event that we thought we knew too well and made it his own with the lean, nervous, relentlessly ambitious writing that is unmistakably DeLillo. Reading the virtuoso first pages of his novel, we see the catastrophe anewâsmell it, taste it, hear it, feel itâas if that September morning had dawned again, fresh and bright: âThe roar was still in the air, the buckling rumble of the fall. This was the world now. Smoke and ash came rolling down the streets and turning corners, busting around corners, seismic tides of smoke, with office paper flashing past, standard sheets with cutting edge, skimming, whipping past, otherworldly things in the morning pall.â
Out of the smoke and ash comes a man in a suit, carrying a briefcase, âglass in his hair and face, marbled bolls of blood and light.â The manâs name is Keith Neudecker, and he was working in his office in the North Tower, far too close to the point of impact. Only dimly aware of his injuries, he accepts a lift uptown to the apartment where his estranged wife Lianne lives with their son, Justin, whoâs 7. Thatâs the core of the novel: a survivor and his wife and child and what comes after (âEverything now is measured by afterâ).
Justin has little friends who now search the skies for planes; Lianne has a mother; the mother has a lover (who may have been complicit with the Red Brigades in the 1970âs); and all of them (and all of us) register in different ways the impact of what Keith has survived, the shock waves emanating from Ground Zero. Thereâs also another survivorâthe owner of the briefcase Keith was carrying when he walked out of the smoke and ashâwho says, âI feel like Iâm still on the stairs â¦. If I live to be a hundred Iâll still be on the stairs.â This woman wants to tell Keith everything about her escape from the towerââthe timeless drift of the long spiral downââa grim march they both endured. âHe listened carefully, noting every detail, trying to find himself in the crowd.â
Mr. DeLillo doubles back in time to meet one of the hijackers, Hammad. Rapid, elliptical sketches give us a hazy outline: his recruitment in Hamburg, his training in Afghanistan, the waiting in Florida, the doubts and recommitment, the âelectricâ presence of Mohamed Atta. âThey felt things together, he and his brothers. They felt the claim of danger and isolation. They felt the magnetic effect of plot. Plot drew them together more closely than ever. Plot closed the world to the slenderest line of sight, where everything converges to a point.â Next page >