Susan Choi: A Person Of Interest

Aux Features Books
Susan Choi: A Person Of Interest

There's a kind of teacher
that Robin Williams never plays. College campuses are full of them: gray-haired
academics haunting the margins, place-holders in the classroom who don't
inspire or offend. They aren't bad—they're merely competent, which is
usually enough. In Susan Choi's moving new novel, A Person Of Interest, one of their number is
forced to exceed expectations; he doesn't recite Latin or climb desks, but
that's probably for the best.

A math instructor at a
small Midwestern university, Professor Lee has made a career out of keeping his
head down. But when a mail bomb kills one of his successful colleagues, Lee is
noticed simply because he has an office next door. After the attack, he gets an
anonymous letter reminding him of a time in his life he'd rather forget; to
cover his embarrassment, he lies about the letter to the FBI. Unfortunately,
the bombing is the latest in a series of attacks against high-profile
intellectuals, and while Lee's middle-of-the-road status protects him from the
"Brain Bomber," his obfuscation attracts the attention of the agents covering
the case. Unable to justify his erratic behavior to the government or his
co-workers, Lee attempts to uncover his connection with the bomber, and learn
how the mistakes of his past might be affecting the present.

As a thriller, Person is never really
convincing; the plot twists are more distracting than compelling, and the FBI
agents who dog Lee don't rise above the level of authoritative ciphers. But
Choi is less concerned with investigating an explosion than with detailing its
aftershocks. In clear, compassionate language, she charts the wreckage of Lee's
history: the failed marriages, the estranged daughter, the ruined friendships.
Just as compassionately, she follows his attempts to understand his mistakes.
Choi exposes the minor treacheries that can undermine a relationship without
exaggerating their effects or underplaying their intentions. In the process,
she presents a path to redemption all the more remarkable for its lack of
obvious salvation. Some mistakes may never be forgiven, but there's a chance
they can be lived with, and perhaps someday forgotten.

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