SFGate: Debut novel 'Dear American Airlines' has perfect timing

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008 (AP)
Debut novel 'Dear American Airlines' has perfect timing
By CHAD ROEDEMEIER, Associated Press Writer


   (06-03) 09:33 PDT , (AP) --
   "Dear American Airlines" (Houghton Mifflin, 192 pages. $22), by Jonathan
Miles: There could never be a debut novel more perfectly timed to enter
the world than Jonathan Miles'"Dear American Airlines."
   The book is a novel-length complaint letter written by one angry American
Airlines passenger who has been stranded in Chicago's O'Hare International
Airport and may miss his daughter's wedding in Los Angeles.
   Sound familiar? Just a few months ago, hundreds of thousands of actual
American Airlines customers were stranded in airports across the country
when the airline was forced to cancel 3,100 flights to check or redo
something called "wiring bundles." The universe, or at least the Federal
Aviation Administration, has apparently gift-wrapped a marketing campaign
just for this book.
   So we can credit Miles, the cocktails columnist at The New York Times,
with excellent timing. But we can also credit him with a sharp and funny
first novel that will outlast the particular troubles of the modern
airline industry.
   Bennie Ford's letter begins as a request — check that, a profane
demand — for a refund of his $392.68 ticket. He's desperately trying
to get to Los Angeles for the wedding of his estranged daughter, whom he
hasn't seen in years.
   From the first paragraph, we hear Bennie's distinctive voice: angry and
outraged, literate and funny. If the canceled flight weren't awful enough,
he has to sit in a "maldesigned seat in this maldesigned airport," a limbo
without clocks or cigarettes, where everyone seems to be playing sudoku,
"the analgesic du jour of the traveling class."
   It may seem like faint praise to call a novel "funny," as if laughter we=
re
a guilty pleasure in serious literature, something enjoyable but slightly
disreputable. But what good is satire without humor? It shouldn't hurt
Miles' reputation as a writer to point out a simple fact: This book will
make you laugh. Out loud and repeatedly.
   Bennie grew up in New Orleans, "where cirrhosis of the liver is listed as
'Natural Causes' on a death certificate." Holding his daughter in his arms
for the first time, Bennie reflects, "She was so beautiful and small
— a gorgeous pink speck of life. But I should also confess that I
was drunk almost beyond recognition."
   Later, in the middle of a domestic dispute, he finds himself locked out =
of
his apartment in the rain. He screams his wife's name only once before it
hits him: "You simply cannot shout the name Stella while standing under a
window in New Orleans and hope for anything like an authentic or even
mildly earnest moment."
   Even in his despair, Bennie can't resist a good one-liner at his own
expense.
   Admittedly, whether you enjoy this novel may depend on your tolerance for
a certain stock literary "guy": the brawling and boozy tough-guy poet, a
little too sensitive for today's world, a little too broken inside to hold
together a relationship. The template for Bennie Ford might be well-worn,
but Miles never falls into the cliched traps of drunken sentimentality or
self-pity.
   Bennie's letter soon becomes something more, a sincere confession about
his failures and regrets, charting the collapse from his early years as an
aspiring poet and young father, to his divorce and estrangement from his
family.
   He's a bad father and a miserable husband, but he doesn't flinch from the
truth of it. As readers, we admire his honesty and his righteous anger at
modern life and modern airports. And in the end, Bennie is blessed with a
moment of redemption, a touch of grace for a man stuck in O'Hare's
interminable purgatory. ---------------------------------------------------=
-------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

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