Otterbein Aegis Spring 2012

Page 100

Aegis 2012

100

Book Review >>> Jacqlyn Schott

Let the Great World Spin Colum McCann. New York: Random House, 2009. 368 pp.

“The core reason for it all was beauty. Walking was a divine delight. Everything was rewritten when he was up in the air. New things were possible with the human form. It went beyond equilibrium. He felt for a moment uncreated. Another kind of awake” (McCann 164). Let the Great World Spin, by Colum McCann, was published in 2009 by Random House; one would never know that this novel was not published directly after the 9/11 tragedy, for the 1974 New York world that McCann creates, along with his characters, reflect so well the shift of mind that happened both in America and across the globe. The novel centers on the infamous tightrope walk over 110 stories on the Twin Towers by Philippe Petit. Do not mistake this centralizing event as being the focus of the novel, because the true focus of this novel is how people connect even through the most unthinkable of occurrences and situations. That is the true touchstone of the novel and the hub around which each individual story unfolds. “‘Ah, no, they’re good people,’ Corrigan said. ‘They just don’t know what they are doing. Or what’s being done to them. It’s about fear. You know? They’re all throbbing with fear. We all are’” (29). Corrigan is one of the first characters introduced in the novel and remains a pillar throughout, a character manifestation of the connection touchstone. Both Corrigan and his brother, Ciaran, struggle to find meaning and purpose in their lives surrounded by nothing but tragedy and destitution after they leave their home in Ireland to venture to the United States. From then on, the novel revolves around different characters and their relationships with the brothers and all of their relationships to Petit’s walk across the tightrope. It is through utilizing this one amazing act in history as the connection between seemingly unconnected people that McCann drives the central theme of connection home and how everyone walks some sort of tightrope in their life whether it is a tightrope of love, grief, belonging, or even identity. This event allows readers to glimpse into how a single event can shake and shape a life so profoundly, that nothing remains the same afterwards. One can find this theme of connection and significance throughout literature and even more specifically American literature, for Americans have always been fascinated with the thought of “the new frontier.” Before Petit’s walk, no one ever really paid much attention to the Twin Towers or the role that those towers played in their lives. Petit paved a new frontier by reintroducing the masses to the significance that something can hold and reintroducing people to the idea of risk, of chance, and of flight.


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