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Early Warning

A novel

Read by Lorelei King
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On sale Apr 28, 2015 | 18 Hours and 12 Minutes | 9781101889084
Grades 9-12 + AP/IB
From the Pulitzer Prize-winner: the second installment, following Some Luck, of her widely acclaimed, best-selling American trilogy, which brings the journey of a remarkable family with roots in the Iowa heartland into mid-century America

Early Warning opens in 1953 with the Langdon family at a crossroads. Their stalwart patriarch, Walter, who with his wife, Rosanna, sustained their farm for three decades, has suddenly died, leaving their five children, now adults, looking to the future. Only one will remain in Iowa to work the land, while the others scatter to Washington, D.C., California, and everywhere in between.

As the country moves out of post–World War II optimism through the darker landscape of the Cold War and the social and sexual revolutions of the 1960s and ’70s, and then into the unprecedented wealth—for some—of the early 1980s, the Langdon children each follow a different path in a rapidly changing world. And they now have children of their own: twin boys who are best friends and vicious rivals; a girl whose rebellious spirit takes her to the notorious Peoples Temple in San Francisco; and a golden boy who drops out of college to fight in Vietnam—leaving behind a secret legacy that will send shock waves through the Langdon family into the next generation. 

Capturing a transformative period through richly drawn characters we come to know and care deeply for, Early Warning continues Smiley’s extraordinary epic trilogy, a gorgeously told saga that began with Some Luck and will span a century in America. But it also stands entirely on its own as an engrossing story of the challenges—and rewards—of family and home, even in the most turbulent of times, all while showcasing a beloved writer at the height of her considerable powers.
Frank did not haunt Front Street and Maiden Lane; he circled it, wending here and there, his eye always peeled. He had the time—he’d given up the whoring and the flying and practically everything else. He told Andy that he had taken up golf, and was planning to join a country club but hadn’t decided which one, so he was visiting all of them. He even bought a set of clubs and kept them in the trunk of his Chrysler. But he didn’t drive the Chrysler anywhere near the Knickerbocker. He zipped over the GW Bridge, down the West Side Highway, then left on Canal Street. Then he parked in a lot near China-town, and started walking. Sometimes he walked first toward the river and then south (southwest—his inner compass was still accurate). Other times, he walked down Pearl Street or Gold Street, scanning the passing women.

He saw her twice in the first week in March. Both times, she was wearing the black coat. He followed her at a distance, taking note not only of where she went and which buildings she frequented, but also of whom she spoke to, whether any men walked along with her or picked her up (they did not), and whom she greeted. The first afternoon, he followed her for an hour and never got closer than half a block. The second time, she went into that same brick building after thirty–seven minutes. He needed a plan.

Events at the office interfered for a while. Friskie got drunk and slapped the Sulzberger cousin in the street outside the Waldorf after a dance—it got into the papers; the girl broke the engagement; Dave Courtland said high time, she was a Jew; and Frank had to fly down to Galveston and talk not only to Dave, but to the wife, Anna. It took seventeen days to work out a reconciliation, and the Sulzberger parents were not happy, but, on the other hand, they had not heard the “Jew” comment, and Friskie was a very, very handsome young man. Then the head of the Venezuela office, Jesús De La Garza, came for a visit, and he was in New York for seven days and out in Southampton for a long weekend. After he left, Jim Upjohn told Frank, he tacked a note to the door of the room Jesús stayed in that read, “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the going of the Lord.”

The gift was that Frank was sitting at a table in the White Horse Tavern, and he saw her through the window. She passed the outside tables, came in, sat down nearby, and pulled out a copy of The Atlantic Monthly. Her coat was a slender trench, two years out of style. When she pushed her scarf back, he saw she had short, thick hair now, dark with scattered gray streaks, but neatly cut. She was fuller in the bust than she’d been during the war, and had just the beginnings of a belly, though she was neatly girdled. As she read, two wrinkles formed between her eyebrows, and her mouth thinned a bit, though her lips were still fuller than most women’s. She ordered a sherry and kept reading. He squinted: it was an article entitled “Anyone Can Play the Harmonica.” This was true, in Frank’s experience, so he was surprised that there would be an article about it.

She must have sensed him looking over her shoulder, because she glanced in his direction and gave him one of those little smiles. He said, “Do I know you?”

“I don’t think so.” Her accent was very good, just an underlying melody of the Mediterranean.

Then he said, “May I know you?”

This time she laughed, and it was the same laugh he remembered, merry and deep, the laugh of a woman with plenty of experience.

“I come from a long line of harmonica players.”

“Is that possible?” said the woman.

Right then, Frank knew that his fate depended upon pretending that he had never met her before, to collude in the idea that he believed she was from Queens or Rome or wherever she wanted to be from. What people had done to survive the war was their own business, was it not? He smiled, knowing that his smile was still hypnotic if he really meant it. “My brother is a farmer in Iowa who makes harmonicas by hand, from roots and branches.”

She did laugh. She did.

They chatted for an hour, exchanging only names—hers was Lydia Forêt—but nothing about occupations or background. Button by button, she removed her coat. He took it from her and hung it on the coat rack. She was wearing a navy-blue sheath with a slender red belt. Frank took off his own jacket and loosened his tie. They discussed whether the humidity had gotten worse and the likelihood of a storm. Others were talking about Carol Burnett, who had won an Emmy the night before, so they did, too. “She’s funny,” said Frank. The woman said, “She’ll do anything. I like that.” Then she reddened a little and said, “For a laugh, I mean. I saw her do a show a few years ago somewhere around here, I think.” Frank said that he had seen Nichols and May on Broadway the previous year. The woman said that she had a ticket for My Fair Lady, and she was looking forward to seeing it. Frank said that he knew some people who had gone to the opening night of that. There was a pause in the conversation, and Frank said, “So—can anyone play the harmonica?”

“I guess this gentleman did.” She glanced at the page. “Herbert Kupferberg. In between watching Tannhäuser and Mozart, he taught himself to play ‘Taps.’ ” She glanced at her wristwatch and moved her feet. Frank stood up and fetched her coat. Then she stood, and he held it for her. He said, “I would like to talk with you again.”

She smiled. It was that same smile from eighteen years ago, sunny, retreating. She said, “Perhaps we shall run into each other.” She shook his hand, then turned and walked briskly through the White Horse Tavern door and click–click down Hudson Street. When she turned her head to look at something, Frank felt ravished and limp.


Excerpted from Early Warning by Jane Smiley. Copyright © 2015 by Jane Smiley. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
“In Early Warning, the five grown Langdon children take center stage, and [the book] concludes in 1986, with a second generation heading offstage to make room for their children. They take with them the rise and fall of disco, the beginnings of AIDS, the terror of nuclear war. There is a grandeur to this—the novel engrosses us. We fall for the Langdons as the pages turn, their lives passing with terrible speed as the new generation waits impatiently for their turn in the sun. Take consolation in Golden Age, the trilogy’s final installment, arriving in October (Smiley is certain to have a field day with Presidents Bush). And don’t forget the solace of rereading. Novels may take liberties with lives, speeding them along, but characters, unlike their creators, are immortal.” —Diane Leach, PopMatters

“Triumphant. Richly engrossing . . . Smiley propels the Langdons—and her readers—into American life. Here are the big historic events [from 1953 to 1986]—from the Cold War to Vietnam; JFK’s presidency and assassination to the Jonestown mass suicides; Watergate to the Iran hostage crisis; the AIDS epidemic to the sexual revolution—that defined those times. [But] while history shapes Early Warning, it is the personal dramas that command attention. Charismatic, amoral Frank, who seems to make money at whatever he turns to, is still at the center . . . Smiley’s saga mines the inner lives of its characters. Early Warning is a masterful novel that sets the universal questions about love, family, home and identity against the background of a turbulent century. If there is a flaw, it is only that readers will have to wait for The Golden Age, the final volume of Smiley’s brilliantly conceived epic trilogy.” —Amy Goodfellow Wagner, examiner.com (five stars)

“Smiley’s most significant work . . . Early Warning’s scope is broad without ever veering off course. It’s about the adult Langdon children and the people they’re becoming, who they’ve created, the lives they’ve lived and built, along with all the political, natural, social, economical, ecological, fashionable, and cultural happenings that swirl around them on and off the farm. If anyone thought the prolific Smiley peaked with A Thousand Acres, they’d be wrong . . . Absorbing.” —Wendy Ward, Baltimore City Paper

“A king-size American quilt of a novel, with fifty-plus characters and thirty-four years of plot about an ambitious Midwestern clan [whose] family members range across the midcentury political spectrum . . . Smiley has a superb ear for downhome understatement.” —The New Yorker

“Expansive yet intimate . . . crisply detailed. The second volume of Smiley’s trilogy takes the Langdons through 1986. While the siblings at the novel’s heart chart their own paths, they’re never truly apart.  While [an] older sister feels she’s ‘known true love from the day she was born,’ the youngest wants to forgive their mother, ‘but she couldn’t remember what for.’ Among the novel’s many successes are those contradictory touch points; when the personal and the public match up (in a Vietnam chapter worthy of Tim O’Brien), the narrative can be heartbreaking. The Langdon family is a vast, collective character unto itself—lovingly claustrophobic, emotionally interdependent, sending out ever more branches.” —Roy Hoffman, The New York Times Book Review
 
Early Warning opens two weeks after Joseph Stalin’s death in 1953—more challenging authorial territory [than Some Luck];  Smiley succeeds not by following convention, but by creating conventions of her own. Ignoring the traditional novelistic template, she replicates in these novels the less synchronized, plodding pace of unmappable, everyday real life. As in real life, crises erupt in a disorderly fashion, and then recede, and then arise again. Characters are tested in small moments as well as during life-altering events. Problems, relationships, situations are resolved, only to present themselves again. Early Warning unfolds during perhaps the most fascinating chunk of the century under this trilogy’s consideration: 1953–1986. Big things happen in the world . . . Smiley keeps God in the details, and the details anchored in time, so the reader always hears the ticking clock that distinguishes one era from the next; [she] peppers the narrative with evocative historical icons. She puts her characters through crises and situations—closeted gay life, psychoanalysis, difficult pregnancy decisions, cults, cross-class marriages, plain old bad marriages—that reinforce her thoroughgoing portrait of the times. But the real magic of this novel is that which makes every Jane Smiley book a work of art, recognizably hers: the writing, the writing, the writing. Evident in every chapter is the author’s attachment to, and abiding love for, the flat Midwestern landscape where her imagination first took shape . . . At its heart, Early Warning (and one can assume, the entire trilogy) wrestles with a single question of human existence, confounding and foundational in every era, and for every living person: What makes a family? . . . It’s a measure of Smiley’s mastery that in meeting her self-imposed challenge to play with every genre, she has, in a sense, invented a new one. There’s much that’s truly innovative about Smiley’s match-up between form and function, and it is part of the pleasure of the text to follow her near-perfect use of medium to deliver her message. Will the final installment of The Last Hundred Years measure up to the first two? Smiley bestows on her readers this gift, too: we’ll have to wait less than one year to find out.” —Meredith Maran, Los Angeles Review of Books
 
“Masterful . . . Smiley’s brilliance is twofold. In telling the story of an American family, she unfurls the troubled trajectory of 20th century America. Her prose, almost documentary-like, is slyly revealing, offering small, moving, sometimes funny epiphanies that reward the attentive reader. Some Luck  began the story of farmer Walter Langdon, his wife Rosanna and their brood of kids in 1920, and swept through the Depression and World War II. Early Warning opens with Walter's funeral in 1953, and these kids, now grown up, saying goodbye to their father . . . Smiley makes her characters utterly individual, each grown into the adult from the child we met in the first book. Her ability to write from a child's point of view—to literally see the world from a knee-high vantage point—is something of a miracle, and never sentimental. We meet a new generation—the baby-boom kids of Frank and his siblings—in Early Warning, who grow up before our eyes, as their parents did in the first book. As we land in the 1980s, yet another generation of Langdons is beginning to arrive in the world. Bring on volume three—soon, please—and the Millennial Langdons.” —Jocelyn McClurg, USA Today

“Absorbing . . . dynamic . . . The Pulitzer winner continues her intimate and exceptional exploration of American history through the eyes of an Iowa family . . . Smiley is elegantly tucking a busy century into three volumes full of life, humor and sharp observation . . . Early Warning picks up where Smiley left off [in Some Luck] and barrels ahead through 1986, bumping up against the Cold War, Vietnam, the counterculture revolution and other historic touchstones . . . She quickly corrals her large cast, deploying them with care and painting each important character with unique tics and wrinkles . . . Despite the book’s sorrows, Smiley ends on a lovely note of optimism. Many things can go wrong, yes, but we live fully in the moments that are right.” —Connie Ogle, Miami Herald
 
“The second installment of Smiley’s Last Hundred Years trilogy follows the next generation of Langdons across a mid-twentieth century American panorama, evoking—with perceptiveness and sweep—the social revolutions that realign their fates.” —Megan O’Grady, Vogue

“Wondrous . . . Early Warning is a good reminder that the big, juicy novel is ascendant again . . . Smiley enriches the great-events model of American history with her equal attention to cultural history, and she makes the lives of obscure women, men and children as important as the lives of Great Men . . . Like the 19th-century novels she invokes, her stories revel in coincidences, repetitions, revelations and elaborations of events and themes. The surprises are irresistible. She plucks from a crowded gathering of relatives and, one by one, develops lives that are rich, mysterious and constantly changing . . . The Midwestern intonations of Early Warning shift subtly as Smiley narrates the Langdons’ moves to the East and West coasts, their educations, their travels to Europe, their rapid ascension into wealth and the inclusion of other ethnicities and sexual preferences into their midst. As their world expands, the events becomes mesmerizing, the reading compulsive and the direct language a guard against sentimentality.” —Valerie Sayers, The Washington Post
 
“Absorbing. It's a good thing we only had to wait six months for Early Warning, the second volume of Smiley's ambitious Last Hundred Years trilogy. Why? Because we were eager to follow up on the members of the Iowa farm family she introduced in Some Luck.  As Smiley continues her year-by-year march, we are pulled into her characters’ dramas. In its sweeping scope, Smiley's saga recalls Balzac's Human Comedy, John Dos Passos's U.S.A. trilogy and John Updike's Rabbit quartet. Firmly rooted in history, this middle volume begins two weeks after Joseph Stalin's death in 1953 and extends through 1986. The novel's cumulative power lies in the unfolding lives of its characters. . . The Last Hundred Years trilogy is about change—both societal and personal. One of [its] many pleasures is that her characters evolve, sometimes surprising even themselves. Smiley's signature achievement, in this by turns wry and wise old-fashioned yarn, is her skill at deftly shifting focus between the long and short views. Early Warning doesn't leave us hanging, but it does leave us looking forward to the finale of this epic endeavor.” —Heller McAlpin, NPR.org
 
“Wonderful. As the title suggests, Early Warning is tinged with vague and real dread—not only the Cold War dread of nuclear annihilation but also dread of the draft, of cults, of AIDS, of potential childhood accidents . . . Yet what’s most captivating about Early Warning is not the panoramic view of large-scale historical events or the shifting social zeitgeist of our country; they are background for the characters’ lives, longings and disappointments. Smiley deftly shifts point of view, from toddler to grandmother, often in the same chapter. We intimately come to know all the Langdons and the high emotional stakes in their lives . . . Smiley poses large questions and offers powerful insights.” —Natalie Serber, San Francisco Chronicle
 
“As in Some Luck, Early Warning covers thirty-three years of societal, economic, and political change, [but] focuses on the individual experiences and reactions of her characters. The Last Hundred Years has a restrained, subtle style; despite its old-fashioned feel, there are no romanticized, happy endings. Smiley manages to work in a variety of experiences for her characters—both loving and loveless marriages, in addition to adultery, alcoholism, homosexuality, and a suicide attempt—without anything feeling melodramatic or overwrought . . . Above all, Smiley is a master of the intimate details that reveal the inner depths of the characters. The third book of the trilogy will end in 2020, and it will be fascinating to see what predictions of the future Smiley will make.” —Eleanora Buckbee, Everyday eBook
 
“Nuanced and intimate. Smiley's ambitious project, isn't driven by traditional plot, or rising action that leads to a climax and resolution. Instead, each chapter represents a year in the life of the family, covering what's notable, from the quotidian to eventful. It reads more like an unconventional diary, but that doesn't mean readers will be any less caught up in the small and large dramas of the Langdons' everyday lives . . . In Early Warning, Iowa is still the emotional and psychic vortex of the characters' lives, no matter how far they travel, or how many new, more diverse branches have sprouted on the Langdon family tree . . . Smiley's generous and engaging study of family life, time and place isn't so much about what happens but how things happen, and the ways in which the characters respond and endure. The unconventional form of Smiley's undertaking works for a long, sprawling epic, because the first two books in the trilogy somehow capture the feel and aesthetic of an American family. You meet the Langdons in Some Luck, but by the time you finish Early Warning, you'll feel like you are one of them.” —Christi Clancy, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
 
“Brilliant . . . Dickensian in its breadth and detail, Early Warning is distinctly un-Dickensian in its sense of purpose. It reflects a distinctly modern understanding of life—and fiction—as unplotted except in the direction and shape that each character, in uneasy alliance with chance, chooses and views as a meaningful pattern . . . The book immerses us in daily life as experienced by the old and young, the aimless and enterprising. And when matters of greater social or cultural consequence touch these lives, we see and feel them as a character does. Whether these characters are debating politics, escaping an oppressive husband, facing grave illness, seeking solace in a cult, falling in love, making a deal, going through basic training or caring for a child, their doings are conveyed in intimate detail, felt and understood on each character’s own terms. Smiley delivers moments when, among the daily maneuvers and mundane details the arc of her narrative lifts us, and we see for an instant how anything might happen.” —Ellen Akins, Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
“Enthralling . . . vividly etched . . . Smiley grew up in the '50s and '60s, so the world of Early Warning is both familiar and fascinating to her. Smiley's books mix political and social ideas with personal lives. When the third volume of the trilogy is published, Smiley hopes the readers will step back and ask a question: ‘Are the bad things that have happened in the modern era things that we can correct . . . or is it too late?’ What is clear is Smiley's commitment to her craft. For her, it's not about the awards. It's about the work.” —Paul Freeman, San Jose Mercury News
 
“Monumental . . . phenomenally powerful. Smiley has a remarkable grip on all her characters. Comparisons have already been made with John Updike’s towering Rabbit tetralogy, and both writers have an extraordinary ability to define what it is to be American at the most intimate level. But where Updike is the consummate stylist, Smiley speaks more plainly; where he is cool, she is warm. She is also very funny, and too finely intelligent to stoop to folksiness . . . In fact, what Smiley feels most like here—for her faultless skills in bringing a wide cast so vividly into being that we would know them anywhere; for the remarkable intensity of her feeling for territory and landscape; and her combination of impatient intellect, emotional perspicacity and unfailing humanity—is America’s Tolstoy . . . The satisfactions of the first two volumes of this trilogy have been so complex and nourishing that the third installment can’t come soon enough.” —Christobel Ken, The Guardian (UK)
 
“The quietly great Jane Smiley takes a very different tack to telling a story.  [This] second volume, opens in 1953. This is a world of women with big hair who smoke while breastfeeding. You’ll recognise them and their homes and their whiskydrinking husbands from Mad Men, of which this is the epic literary cousin . . . Having such an extensive cast of characters could be confusing, but Smiley is a writer who, in a long career spanning work in almost every genre, has always made sure the reader is having a good time . . She narrate[s] the great sweep of the ages as it really happened, in all its linked but disparate elements. She succeeds effortlessly and without tricks. The phrase ‘a great novelist at the height of her powers’ is so overused, but for once here it really is true: Smiley has a gentle touch and an audaciously limitless scope, and in combination these qualities allow her to do anything she likes.” —Melissa Katsoulis, The Times of London
 
“Utterly engaging . . . Early Warning continues the galloping chronological biography of a family and of the American century, year by year, child by child. They grow up, move away to Chicago, California, New York; they make money, change nappies, have sex and sweep the yard. Smiley covers most issues: therapy, homosexuality, cults, race, divorce, adultery and three decades of changing crops, gadgets, fashions, language and music. She doesn't judge. The dialogue is funny and real. The story rolls along . . . The point of all this seems to be, we live, we die, we're all equal. Early Warning is a masterpiece of quick and perfectly executed brushstrokes. When the trilogy is completed (this year) we'll have a major addition to the grand chronicle of American Life.” —Rosie Goldsmith, The Independent (UK)

“Opening with the 1953 funeral of patriarch Walter, Smiley follows the Langdon family introduced in Some Luck through its second and third generations . . . Smiley’s narrative web snares major postwar social changes [with] nicely specific details. Each of the large cast of characters has sharply individualized traits, and they are unfailingly interesting. The surprise appearance of a hitherto unsuspected relative reminds us [that] life and love are never perfect—they simply are. Strong storytelling will keep readers looking forward to the promised third volume.” —Kirkus

“Smiley has a big cast to wrangle in the second, atom-and-adultery-haunted volume of the ‘Last Hundred Years’ trilogy. Covering 1953 to 1986 at a clip of one year per chapter, the focus here is the Cold War and its fallout . . . Smiley keeps you reading; she is as deft as ever at conveying the ways in which a family develops.” —Publishers Weekly
© Derek Shapton
JANE SMILEY is the author of numerous novels, including A Thousand Acres, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, and the Last Hundred Years Trilogy: Some LuckEarly Warning, and Golden Age. She is the author as well of several works of nonfiction and books for young adults. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she has also received the PEN Center USA Lifetime Achievement Award for Literature. She lives in Northern California. View titles by Jane Smiley

About

From the Pulitzer Prize-winner: the second installment, following Some Luck, of her widely acclaimed, best-selling American trilogy, which brings the journey of a remarkable family with roots in the Iowa heartland into mid-century America

Early Warning opens in 1953 with the Langdon family at a crossroads. Their stalwart patriarch, Walter, who with his wife, Rosanna, sustained their farm for three decades, has suddenly died, leaving their five children, now adults, looking to the future. Only one will remain in Iowa to work the land, while the others scatter to Washington, D.C., California, and everywhere in between.

As the country moves out of post–World War II optimism through the darker landscape of the Cold War and the social and sexual revolutions of the 1960s and ’70s, and then into the unprecedented wealth—for some—of the early 1980s, the Langdon children each follow a different path in a rapidly changing world. And they now have children of their own: twin boys who are best friends and vicious rivals; a girl whose rebellious spirit takes her to the notorious Peoples Temple in San Francisco; and a golden boy who drops out of college to fight in Vietnam—leaving behind a secret legacy that will send shock waves through the Langdon family into the next generation. 

Capturing a transformative period through richly drawn characters we come to know and care deeply for, Early Warning continues Smiley’s extraordinary epic trilogy, a gorgeously told saga that began with Some Luck and will span a century in America. But it also stands entirely on its own as an engrossing story of the challenges—and rewards—of family and home, even in the most turbulent of times, all while showcasing a beloved writer at the height of her considerable powers.

Excerpt

Frank did not haunt Front Street and Maiden Lane; he circled it, wending here and there, his eye always peeled. He had the time—he’d given up the whoring and the flying and practically everything else. He told Andy that he had taken up golf, and was planning to join a country club but hadn’t decided which one, so he was visiting all of them. He even bought a set of clubs and kept them in the trunk of his Chrysler. But he didn’t drive the Chrysler anywhere near the Knickerbocker. He zipped over the GW Bridge, down the West Side Highway, then left on Canal Street. Then he parked in a lot near China-town, and started walking. Sometimes he walked first toward the river and then south (southwest—his inner compass was still accurate). Other times, he walked down Pearl Street or Gold Street, scanning the passing women.

He saw her twice in the first week in March. Both times, she was wearing the black coat. He followed her at a distance, taking note not only of where she went and which buildings she frequented, but also of whom she spoke to, whether any men walked along with her or picked her up (they did not), and whom she greeted. The first afternoon, he followed her for an hour and never got closer than half a block. The second time, she went into that same brick building after thirty–seven minutes. He needed a plan.

Events at the office interfered for a while. Friskie got drunk and slapped the Sulzberger cousin in the street outside the Waldorf after a dance—it got into the papers; the girl broke the engagement; Dave Courtland said high time, she was a Jew; and Frank had to fly down to Galveston and talk not only to Dave, but to the wife, Anna. It took seventeen days to work out a reconciliation, and the Sulzberger parents were not happy, but, on the other hand, they had not heard the “Jew” comment, and Friskie was a very, very handsome young man. Then the head of the Venezuela office, Jesús De La Garza, came for a visit, and he was in New York for seven days and out in Southampton for a long weekend. After he left, Jim Upjohn told Frank, he tacked a note to the door of the room Jesús stayed in that read, “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the going of the Lord.”

The gift was that Frank was sitting at a table in the White Horse Tavern, and he saw her through the window. She passed the outside tables, came in, sat down nearby, and pulled out a copy of The Atlantic Monthly. Her coat was a slender trench, two years out of style. When she pushed her scarf back, he saw she had short, thick hair now, dark with scattered gray streaks, but neatly cut. She was fuller in the bust than she’d been during the war, and had just the beginnings of a belly, though she was neatly girdled. As she read, two wrinkles formed between her eyebrows, and her mouth thinned a bit, though her lips were still fuller than most women’s. She ordered a sherry and kept reading. He squinted: it was an article entitled “Anyone Can Play the Harmonica.” This was true, in Frank’s experience, so he was surprised that there would be an article about it.

She must have sensed him looking over her shoulder, because she glanced in his direction and gave him one of those little smiles. He said, “Do I know you?”

“I don’t think so.” Her accent was very good, just an underlying melody of the Mediterranean.

Then he said, “May I know you?”

This time she laughed, and it was the same laugh he remembered, merry and deep, the laugh of a woman with plenty of experience.

“I come from a long line of harmonica players.”

“Is that possible?” said the woman.

Right then, Frank knew that his fate depended upon pretending that he had never met her before, to collude in the idea that he believed she was from Queens or Rome or wherever she wanted to be from. What people had done to survive the war was their own business, was it not? He smiled, knowing that his smile was still hypnotic if he really meant it. “My brother is a farmer in Iowa who makes harmonicas by hand, from roots and branches.”

She did laugh. She did.

They chatted for an hour, exchanging only names—hers was Lydia Forêt—but nothing about occupations or background. Button by button, she removed her coat. He took it from her and hung it on the coat rack. She was wearing a navy-blue sheath with a slender red belt. Frank took off his own jacket and loosened his tie. They discussed whether the humidity had gotten worse and the likelihood of a storm. Others were talking about Carol Burnett, who had won an Emmy the night before, so they did, too. “She’s funny,” said Frank. The woman said, “She’ll do anything. I like that.” Then she reddened a little and said, “For a laugh, I mean. I saw her do a show a few years ago somewhere around here, I think.” Frank said that he had seen Nichols and May on Broadway the previous year. The woman said that she had a ticket for My Fair Lady, and she was looking forward to seeing it. Frank said that he knew some people who had gone to the opening night of that. There was a pause in the conversation, and Frank said, “So—can anyone play the harmonica?”

“I guess this gentleman did.” She glanced at the page. “Herbert Kupferberg. In between watching Tannhäuser and Mozart, he taught himself to play ‘Taps.’ ” She glanced at her wristwatch and moved her feet. Frank stood up and fetched her coat. Then she stood, and he held it for her. He said, “I would like to talk with you again.”

She smiled. It was that same smile from eighteen years ago, sunny, retreating. She said, “Perhaps we shall run into each other.” She shook his hand, then turned and walked briskly through the White Horse Tavern door and click–click down Hudson Street. When she turned her head to look at something, Frank felt ravished and limp.


Excerpted from Early Warning by Jane Smiley. Copyright © 2015 by Jane Smiley. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Reviews

“In Early Warning, the five grown Langdon children take center stage, and [the book] concludes in 1986, with a second generation heading offstage to make room for their children. They take with them the rise and fall of disco, the beginnings of AIDS, the terror of nuclear war. There is a grandeur to this—the novel engrosses us. We fall for the Langdons as the pages turn, their lives passing with terrible speed as the new generation waits impatiently for their turn in the sun. Take consolation in Golden Age, the trilogy’s final installment, arriving in October (Smiley is certain to have a field day with Presidents Bush). And don’t forget the solace of rereading. Novels may take liberties with lives, speeding them along, but characters, unlike their creators, are immortal.” —Diane Leach, PopMatters

“Triumphant. Richly engrossing . . . Smiley propels the Langdons—and her readers—into American life. Here are the big historic events [from 1953 to 1986]—from the Cold War to Vietnam; JFK’s presidency and assassination to the Jonestown mass suicides; Watergate to the Iran hostage crisis; the AIDS epidemic to the sexual revolution—that defined those times. [But] while history shapes Early Warning, it is the personal dramas that command attention. Charismatic, amoral Frank, who seems to make money at whatever he turns to, is still at the center . . . Smiley’s saga mines the inner lives of its characters. Early Warning is a masterful novel that sets the universal questions about love, family, home and identity against the background of a turbulent century. If there is a flaw, it is only that readers will have to wait for The Golden Age, the final volume of Smiley’s brilliantly conceived epic trilogy.” —Amy Goodfellow Wagner, examiner.com (five stars)

“Smiley’s most significant work . . . Early Warning’s scope is broad without ever veering off course. It’s about the adult Langdon children and the people they’re becoming, who they’ve created, the lives they’ve lived and built, along with all the political, natural, social, economical, ecological, fashionable, and cultural happenings that swirl around them on and off the farm. If anyone thought the prolific Smiley peaked with A Thousand Acres, they’d be wrong . . . Absorbing.” —Wendy Ward, Baltimore City Paper

“A king-size American quilt of a novel, with fifty-plus characters and thirty-four years of plot about an ambitious Midwestern clan [whose] family members range across the midcentury political spectrum . . . Smiley has a superb ear for downhome understatement.” —The New Yorker

“Expansive yet intimate . . . crisply detailed. The second volume of Smiley’s trilogy takes the Langdons through 1986. While the siblings at the novel’s heart chart their own paths, they’re never truly apart.  While [an] older sister feels she’s ‘known true love from the day she was born,’ the youngest wants to forgive their mother, ‘but she couldn’t remember what for.’ Among the novel’s many successes are those contradictory touch points; when the personal and the public match up (in a Vietnam chapter worthy of Tim O’Brien), the narrative can be heartbreaking. The Langdon family is a vast, collective character unto itself—lovingly claustrophobic, emotionally interdependent, sending out ever more branches.” —Roy Hoffman, The New York Times Book Review
 
Early Warning opens two weeks after Joseph Stalin’s death in 1953—more challenging authorial territory [than Some Luck];  Smiley succeeds not by following convention, but by creating conventions of her own. Ignoring the traditional novelistic template, she replicates in these novels the less synchronized, plodding pace of unmappable, everyday real life. As in real life, crises erupt in a disorderly fashion, and then recede, and then arise again. Characters are tested in small moments as well as during life-altering events. Problems, relationships, situations are resolved, only to present themselves again. Early Warning unfolds during perhaps the most fascinating chunk of the century under this trilogy’s consideration: 1953–1986. Big things happen in the world . . . Smiley keeps God in the details, and the details anchored in time, so the reader always hears the ticking clock that distinguishes one era from the next; [she] peppers the narrative with evocative historical icons. She puts her characters through crises and situations—closeted gay life, psychoanalysis, difficult pregnancy decisions, cults, cross-class marriages, plain old bad marriages—that reinforce her thoroughgoing portrait of the times. But the real magic of this novel is that which makes every Jane Smiley book a work of art, recognizably hers: the writing, the writing, the writing. Evident in every chapter is the author’s attachment to, and abiding love for, the flat Midwestern landscape where her imagination first took shape . . . At its heart, Early Warning (and one can assume, the entire trilogy) wrestles with a single question of human existence, confounding and foundational in every era, and for every living person: What makes a family? . . . It’s a measure of Smiley’s mastery that in meeting her self-imposed challenge to play with every genre, she has, in a sense, invented a new one. There’s much that’s truly innovative about Smiley’s match-up between form and function, and it is part of the pleasure of the text to follow her near-perfect use of medium to deliver her message. Will the final installment of The Last Hundred Years measure up to the first two? Smiley bestows on her readers this gift, too: we’ll have to wait less than one year to find out.” —Meredith Maran, Los Angeles Review of Books
 
“Masterful . . . Smiley’s brilliance is twofold. In telling the story of an American family, she unfurls the troubled trajectory of 20th century America. Her prose, almost documentary-like, is slyly revealing, offering small, moving, sometimes funny epiphanies that reward the attentive reader. Some Luck  began the story of farmer Walter Langdon, his wife Rosanna and their brood of kids in 1920, and swept through the Depression and World War II. Early Warning opens with Walter's funeral in 1953, and these kids, now grown up, saying goodbye to their father . . . Smiley makes her characters utterly individual, each grown into the adult from the child we met in the first book. Her ability to write from a child's point of view—to literally see the world from a knee-high vantage point—is something of a miracle, and never sentimental. We meet a new generation—the baby-boom kids of Frank and his siblings—in Early Warning, who grow up before our eyes, as their parents did in the first book. As we land in the 1980s, yet another generation of Langdons is beginning to arrive in the world. Bring on volume three—soon, please—and the Millennial Langdons.” —Jocelyn McClurg, USA Today

“Absorbing . . . dynamic . . . The Pulitzer winner continues her intimate and exceptional exploration of American history through the eyes of an Iowa family . . . Smiley is elegantly tucking a busy century into three volumes full of life, humor and sharp observation . . . Early Warning picks up where Smiley left off [in Some Luck] and barrels ahead through 1986, bumping up against the Cold War, Vietnam, the counterculture revolution and other historic touchstones . . . She quickly corrals her large cast, deploying them with care and painting each important character with unique tics and wrinkles . . . Despite the book’s sorrows, Smiley ends on a lovely note of optimism. Many things can go wrong, yes, but we live fully in the moments that are right.” —Connie Ogle, Miami Herald
 
“The second installment of Smiley’s Last Hundred Years trilogy follows the next generation of Langdons across a mid-twentieth century American panorama, evoking—with perceptiveness and sweep—the social revolutions that realign their fates.” —Megan O’Grady, Vogue

“Wondrous . . . Early Warning is a good reminder that the big, juicy novel is ascendant again . . . Smiley enriches the great-events model of American history with her equal attention to cultural history, and she makes the lives of obscure women, men and children as important as the lives of Great Men . . . Like the 19th-century novels she invokes, her stories revel in coincidences, repetitions, revelations and elaborations of events and themes. The surprises are irresistible. She plucks from a crowded gathering of relatives and, one by one, develops lives that are rich, mysterious and constantly changing . . . The Midwestern intonations of Early Warning shift subtly as Smiley narrates the Langdons’ moves to the East and West coasts, their educations, their travels to Europe, their rapid ascension into wealth and the inclusion of other ethnicities and sexual preferences into their midst. As their world expands, the events becomes mesmerizing, the reading compulsive and the direct language a guard against sentimentality.” —Valerie Sayers, The Washington Post
 
“Absorbing. It's a good thing we only had to wait six months for Early Warning, the second volume of Smiley's ambitious Last Hundred Years trilogy. Why? Because we were eager to follow up on the members of the Iowa farm family she introduced in Some Luck.  As Smiley continues her year-by-year march, we are pulled into her characters’ dramas. In its sweeping scope, Smiley's saga recalls Balzac's Human Comedy, John Dos Passos's U.S.A. trilogy and John Updike's Rabbit quartet. Firmly rooted in history, this middle volume begins two weeks after Joseph Stalin's death in 1953 and extends through 1986. The novel's cumulative power lies in the unfolding lives of its characters. . . The Last Hundred Years trilogy is about change—both societal and personal. One of [its] many pleasures is that her characters evolve, sometimes surprising even themselves. Smiley's signature achievement, in this by turns wry and wise old-fashioned yarn, is her skill at deftly shifting focus between the long and short views. Early Warning doesn't leave us hanging, but it does leave us looking forward to the finale of this epic endeavor.” —Heller McAlpin, NPR.org
 
“Wonderful. As the title suggests, Early Warning is tinged with vague and real dread—not only the Cold War dread of nuclear annihilation but also dread of the draft, of cults, of AIDS, of potential childhood accidents . . . Yet what’s most captivating about Early Warning is not the panoramic view of large-scale historical events or the shifting social zeitgeist of our country; they are background for the characters’ lives, longings and disappointments. Smiley deftly shifts point of view, from toddler to grandmother, often in the same chapter. We intimately come to know all the Langdons and the high emotional stakes in their lives . . . Smiley poses large questions and offers powerful insights.” —Natalie Serber, San Francisco Chronicle
 
“As in Some Luck, Early Warning covers thirty-three years of societal, economic, and political change, [but] focuses on the individual experiences and reactions of her characters. The Last Hundred Years has a restrained, subtle style; despite its old-fashioned feel, there are no romanticized, happy endings. Smiley manages to work in a variety of experiences for her characters—both loving and loveless marriages, in addition to adultery, alcoholism, homosexuality, and a suicide attempt—without anything feeling melodramatic or overwrought . . . Above all, Smiley is a master of the intimate details that reveal the inner depths of the characters. The third book of the trilogy will end in 2020, and it will be fascinating to see what predictions of the future Smiley will make.” —Eleanora Buckbee, Everyday eBook
 
“Nuanced and intimate. Smiley's ambitious project, isn't driven by traditional plot, or rising action that leads to a climax and resolution. Instead, each chapter represents a year in the life of the family, covering what's notable, from the quotidian to eventful. It reads more like an unconventional diary, but that doesn't mean readers will be any less caught up in the small and large dramas of the Langdons' everyday lives . . . In Early Warning, Iowa is still the emotional and psychic vortex of the characters' lives, no matter how far they travel, or how many new, more diverse branches have sprouted on the Langdon family tree . . . Smiley's generous and engaging study of family life, time and place isn't so much about what happens but how things happen, and the ways in which the characters respond and endure. The unconventional form of Smiley's undertaking works for a long, sprawling epic, because the first two books in the trilogy somehow capture the feel and aesthetic of an American family. You meet the Langdons in Some Luck, but by the time you finish Early Warning, you'll feel like you are one of them.” —Christi Clancy, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
 
“Brilliant . . . Dickensian in its breadth and detail, Early Warning is distinctly un-Dickensian in its sense of purpose. It reflects a distinctly modern understanding of life—and fiction—as unplotted except in the direction and shape that each character, in uneasy alliance with chance, chooses and views as a meaningful pattern . . . The book immerses us in daily life as experienced by the old and young, the aimless and enterprising. And when matters of greater social or cultural consequence touch these lives, we see and feel them as a character does. Whether these characters are debating politics, escaping an oppressive husband, facing grave illness, seeking solace in a cult, falling in love, making a deal, going through basic training or caring for a child, their doings are conveyed in intimate detail, felt and understood on each character’s own terms. Smiley delivers moments when, among the daily maneuvers and mundane details the arc of her narrative lifts us, and we see for an instant how anything might happen.” —Ellen Akins, Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
“Enthralling . . . vividly etched . . . Smiley grew up in the '50s and '60s, so the world of Early Warning is both familiar and fascinating to her. Smiley's books mix political and social ideas with personal lives. When the third volume of the trilogy is published, Smiley hopes the readers will step back and ask a question: ‘Are the bad things that have happened in the modern era things that we can correct . . . or is it too late?’ What is clear is Smiley's commitment to her craft. For her, it's not about the awards. It's about the work.” —Paul Freeman, San Jose Mercury News
 
“Monumental . . . phenomenally powerful. Smiley has a remarkable grip on all her characters. Comparisons have already been made with John Updike’s towering Rabbit tetralogy, and both writers have an extraordinary ability to define what it is to be American at the most intimate level. But where Updike is the consummate stylist, Smiley speaks more plainly; where he is cool, she is warm. She is also very funny, and too finely intelligent to stoop to folksiness . . . In fact, what Smiley feels most like here—for her faultless skills in bringing a wide cast so vividly into being that we would know them anywhere; for the remarkable intensity of her feeling for territory and landscape; and her combination of impatient intellect, emotional perspicacity and unfailing humanity—is America’s Tolstoy . . . The satisfactions of the first two volumes of this trilogy have been so complex and nourishing that the third installment can’t come soon enough.” —Christobel Ken, The Guardian (UK)
 
“The quietly great Jane Smiley takes a very different tack to telling a story.  [This] second volume, opens in 1953. This is a world of women with big hair who smoke while breastfeeding. You’ll recognise them and their homes and their whiskydrinking husbands from Mad Men, of which this is the epic literary cousin . . . Having such an extensive cast of characters could be confusing, but Smiley is a writer who, in a long career spanning work in almost every genre, has always made sure the reader is having a good time . . She narrate[s] the great sweep of the ages as it really happened, in all its linked but disparate elements. She succeeds effortlessly and without tricks. The phrase ‘a great novelist at the height of her powers’ is so overused, but for once here it really is true: Smiley has a gentle touch and an audaciously limitless scope, and in combination these qualities allow her to do anything she likes.” —Melissa Katsoulis, The Times of London
 
“Utterly engaging . . . Early Warning continues the galloping chronological biography of a family and of the American century, year by year, child by child. They grow up, move away to Chicago, California, New York; they make money, change nappies, have sex and sweep the yard. Smiley covers most issues: therapy, homosexuality, cults, race, divorce, adultery and three decades of changing crops, gadgets, fashions, language and music. She doesn't judge. The dialogue is funny and real. The story rolls along . . . The point of all this seems to be, we live, we die, we're all equal. Early Warning is a masterpiece of quick and perfectly executed brushstrokes. When the trilogy is completed (this year) we'll have a major addition to the grand chronicle of American Life.” —Rosie Goldsmith, The Independent (UK)

“Opening with the 1953 funeral of patriarch Walter, Smiley follows the Langdon family introduced in Some Luck through its second and third generations . . . Smiley’s narrative web snares major postwar social changes [with] nicely specific details. Each of the large cast of characters has sharply individualized traits, and they are unfailingly interesting. The surprise appearance of a hitherto unsuspected relative reminds us [that] life and love are never perfect—they simply are. Strong storytelling will keep readers looking forward to the promised third volume.” —Kirkus

“Smiley has a big cast to wrangle in the second, atom-and-adultery-haunted volume of the ‘Last Hundred Years’ trilogy. Covering 1953 to 1986 at a clip of one year per chapter, the focus here is the Cold War and its fallout . . . Smiley keeps you reading; she is as deft as ever at conveying the ways in which a family develops.” —Publishers Weekly

Author

© Derek Shapton
JANE SMILEY is the author of numerous novels, including A Thousand Acres, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, and the Last Hundred Years Trilogy: Some LuckEarly Warning, and Golden Age. She is the author as well of several works of nonfiction and books for young adults. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she has also received the PEN Center USA Lifetime Achievement Award for Literature. She lives in Northern California. View titles by Jane Smiley