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Don't Steal This Book, Read It

The author of a novel about Vietnam-era radicals says you have to understand the '60s to make sense of the mess we're in today.
 
 
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Dana Spiotta's new novel, "Eat the Document," is a gripping read from the get-go. In the early 1970s, a young woman, Mary Whitakker, sits on a motel bed in a strange town, trying to pick a new name. Nothing in her life has prepared her to be an outlaw, but that's what she's become. No name fits quite like her real one.

An anti-war action Mary planned with her lover, Bobby Desoto, went wrong, forcing them to separate and go underground. Both have to forge new identities and somehow put the past behind them. The question is, even if it's possible to move on and become someone new, was it worth it? Spiotta, to her credit, doesn't provide an easy answer.

By the mid-90s, Mary lives in suburbia with her teenage son, Jason, a loner obsessed with the Beach Boys. Ultimately, Jason's interest in the music of his mother's youth provides the key with which he unlocks her secret. Bobby, meanwhile, runs a left-wing bookstore in the Northwest, a local anarchist haunt. Among the regulars is Miranda, a young woman whose political awakening and romantic attraction to Bobby are perfectly wrought. The thing is, she's also attracted to Josh, a technologically gifted troublemaker whose ideals are put to the test when corporate America makes him an offer he can't refuse.

Spiotta does a fantastic job reflecting various subcultures and their respective milieus: Vietnam-era protesters, feminist communards, underground filmmakers, record geeks, computer hackers and Black Bloc types. She propels the reader through past and present, deftly switching eras and perspectives. Best of all, "Eat the Document" overflows with observations astute enough to be unsettling: "People with real freedom never do really 'free' things, like reinvent themselves, leave lives behind, change everything," Mary muses. "Only trapped, desperate people did that." Over the course of the book, identities are invented and shed, and ideologies are adopted and reconsidered.

"Eat the Document" ia a profoundly human book, full of contradiction, conflict and even hope, however tempered. And that seems to be just what the author intended.

Spiotta, whose first novel "Lightning Field" (Scribner, 2001) was a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year, lives in a small town called Cherry Valley in central New York with her husband and daughter. When she isn't writing, they run a small country restaurant, the Rose & Kettle, on the ground floor of their home.

ASTRA TAYLOR: A couple of years ago I read two novels inspired by '60s/'70s militants: "The Company You Keep" by Neil Gordon and "American Woman" by Susan Choi. Did you read these books? It's interesting that you are all post-Baby Boom authors.

DANA SPIOTTA: I didn't read these books. I started writing "Eat the Document" in 2000. I heard about the books you mention long after I began my book and purposefully didn't read them. I also didn't read Christopher Sorrentino's book, "Trance." I didn't read "The Darling," by Russell Banks. I didn't want their books to influence my book. I'm sure they are all interesting novels.

I am not sure the age of the novelists is important. I think the idea of a political fugitive is hard for a novelist to resist. I can't speak for the others, but I guess I think so many '60s and '70s fugitives surfacing in the last 10 years captured the attention of writers. I think for me understanding what happened in the U.S. in the early '70s has relevancy and importance. The issues of that era, the tail end of the Vietnam War, the social changes, have not been resolved or processed in the U.S. Not only is it interesting to me in terms of what dissent means in our culture, but also because the woman's movement, the environmental movement and various issues of technology all came into focus starting then.

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